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15
de noviembre de 2009,
United Nations, Nov 15 (Prensa Latina) Cuba sent a letter
to UN Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon urging the US to act with
regards to terrorists in that country operating against Cuba, and
demanded the release of the five Cuban anti-terrorists in US
jails.
Pedro Nuñez Mosquera, Cuban permanent
representative at the UN, sent the letter, so that it circulates as
official document of the General Assembly and the Security Council,
with the subject measures to end international terror.
The
text denounces the recent release in the US of notorious terrorist
Santiago Alvarez Fernandez-Magrina, sentenced for the possession of
illegal arms cache for anti-Cuba actions.
That criminal, the
text adds, was the one who illegally entered terrorist Luis Posada
Carriles, confessed author of several attacks against Cuba, into US
territory in 2005.
Carriles also took part in tenths of
US-funded plots to kill leader of the Cuban Revolution Fidel Castro,
it stresses.
"Cuba reminds that for fifty years, successive
US governments have organized, encouraged, and allowed numerous
terror acts against the island, with victims from other countries as
well," the letter reads.
Those actions, the document
sustains, have left 3,478 people dead and 2,099 others disabled, as
well as material losses estimated at thousands of millions of
dollars.
If the new US administration really wants to show
its commitment with the anti-terror fight, it now has the
opportunity of acting without doble standards against terrorist
groups and individuals attacking Cuba from that territory, the
letter affirms.
In addition, "it has the chance to make
justice and immediately free the five Cuba anti-terrorists held as
political prisoners for over ten years in US maximum security
prisons," the text points out.
The letter addressed to Ban
Ki-Moon affirms that Washington should prove it is able to leave
aside mean interests of small anti-Cuba groups and defend the real
interests of its people and the international community.
"It
is up to the US to stop using the terror issue with political goals,
and end the unfair, unfounded inclusion of Cuba in the list of
countries allegedly funding terror," the letter
concludes. |