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Daily Archives: September 2, 2010

Police rescue Cuban migrants

rescue Cuban migrantsUpdated: 18:39, Thursday September 2, 2010

Mexican police have rescued six Cuban migrants who had been held for ransom for a month near the popular beachside resort of Cancun, officials said.

A police patrol stormed a house in Bonfil, on the outskirts of Cancun, on Tuesday after receiving a tip, Quintana Roo state public security chief Enrique Alberto Sanmiguel told AFP.

'When the patrol arrived, they found five men and a woman who explained they were Cubans,' he said on Wednesday, noting that the abductors were seeking between $US8000 ($A8,792) and $US10,000 ($A10,990) in ransom from the migrants' US relatives in Miami.

During the ordeal, the Cubans were moved constantly to different sites in order to avoid detection by police.

Cancun is a major transit point for thousands of Cuban boatpeople who leave their communist island illegally and through Mexico in a bid to reach the United States and be granted asylum there.

The rescue came a week after Mexican police discovered the bodies of 72 Central and South American migrants on a ranch in northeastern Mexico close to the US border.

http://www2.skynews.com.au/world/article.aspx?id=508194&;articleID=

What Easing Cuba Travel Laws Means for Miami’s Cuban Exiles

What Easing Cuba Laws Means for Miami's Cuban ExilesAmanda AbellaPublished August 20, 2010 by:

CORAL GABLES, Fla. — In a move that could have Cuban exiles in Miami rioting fairly soon, the Obama administration is considering easing travel restrictions to Cuba. The move would keep intact a 50 year old against the communist regime but would allow opportunities for students, professors, and researchers to visit Cuba.

Barack Obama has said he wants to reach out to Cuba to promote democracy by easing travel and financial restrictions. A decision would be announced before the end of next week; however the Miami Herald reports that political considerations could hold up the decision until midterm elections.

There are close to 2 million Cuban exiles living in the United States, most of which call Miami home. What would this legislation mean to a group of people who many times sacrificed their own lives to flee from a communist regime?

This is an issue close to my heart as my family fled Cuba in the 1960s. When the Cuban Revolution took hold they lost everything and trying to get out of the island to start a new life in America was an odyssey. I had family members put in for speaking out against the government and friends who have risked their lives for a better life in America. My grandparents died without ever having gone back and my parents refuse to set foot in their birthplace until there is for all of its citizens. So I, along with many other Cuban Americans, find ourselves asking if the Obama administration's approach is the best one.

There seem to be two ways to look at this issue. The first approach is that of the Obama administration: by easing restrictions the Cuban community can see that democracy is the only way to run a country. This would be the approach deeming the title wishful thinking. Sure, it would be great if a non-military American presence in Cuba would help speed things up on the road to a Cuban democracy, but we don't live in a perfect world. Let us remember that Europeans have been visiting Cuba for years and while they enjoy the wonderful beaches of Varadero and the time capsule that is Havana, the Cuban government still oppresses its people. Political prisoners have still died even when non-communist visitors are enjoying the beauty of the island. Cuban-Americans have also visited the island, granted with some restrictions in part by the government, and while they drop American dollars visiting their families Cuban citizens are allowed nothing. For this reason it may be naïve on the part of the Obama administration to think that a few Americans can change the situation in a country that has shown little interest in reform.

The second approach is that easing travel and financial restrictions to Cuba for some Americans will only financially support a communist regime. Is this approach bleak? Perhaps. However it is closer to the reality of the situation in Cuba. Fifty years of dictatorship is not going to change just because the American government decides to lift some travel restrictions. It is also rather contradictory to an embargo the Obama administration is claiming to keep intact. This is the approach of many of the Cuban exiles living in Miami.The Miami Herald also reports that several Republican and Democratic politicians oppose the measure as it weakens the attempts to promote fundamental change in Cuba.

Does Cuba need change? Absolutely. But financially supporting a regime that has no interest in reform is not the way to go about bringing any hope or change for its people.

http://www.associatedcontent.com/article/5704996/what_easing_cuba_travel_laws_means.html

Havana dreaming: travel promoters gearing up for expected relaxation of limits to Cuba travel

Havana dreaming: promoters gearing up for expected relaxation of limits to Cuba travelUncategorized — posted by bshaw on September, 2 2010 1:03 PMBy William E. Gibson, Washington Bureau

The unofficial word in Washington is that the Obama administration plans to relax limits on travel to Cuba for professional, educational and artistic purposes.

Some travel promoters are gearing up to handle potentially hundreds of thousands more visits.

Cuba Tours, a Canadian outfit, is urging Americans to start booking trips before the anticipated rules change.

"There is no need to wait for changes from Washington and be left out on account of overbooked tours and too few rooms and services," the group says in an e-mail message touting their licensed services.

The tour group promotes a Boomers Whole Cuba Tour, a Havana International Jazz Festival Tour, a New Years Teachers Introduction to Cuba Tour and others detailed at http://CubaFriends.com/

"Cubans are eager to meet you and make friends with their northern cousins," says Marcel Hatch, education director for the group.

Canadians have long traveled to Cuba without restraint.

The administration has not announced the change, but sources say it will come later this year, perhaps after the mid-term elections in November.

The new rules would not undo the U.S. , nor would they open the floodgates to American tourists. They would ease restrictions on visas for selected purposes — business, educational or artistic — that were imposed by former George W. Bush.

Essentially U.S. officials would return to the policy of the Bill Clinton administration, which encouraged people-to-people encounters with Cubans.

Most Cuban-American leaders in South Florida support limits on travel to try to isolate Cuba and deprive the Castro regime of dollars. But many in Congress are pressing to remove the travel ban for all Americans, saying more contact and communication would encourage reforms in Cuba.

President Barack Obama last year fulfilled his campaign promise to allow Cuban-Americans to visit their families and to send unlimited amounts of money to Cuba.

Relaxed rules that make it easier for special groups to visit the island is the next incremental step toward closer engagement with Florida's estranged neighbor.

http://blogs.orlandosentinel.com/news_politics/2010/09/havana-dreaming-travel-promoters-gearing-up-for-expected-relaxation-of-limits-to-cuba-travel.html

No travel to ‘terrorist’ countries for Florida state universities: court

No to 'terrorist' countries for Florida state universities: court

A challenge to a 2006 law banning state -funded travel to countries the US deems sponsors of terrorism was struck down Tuesday. Florida-based international scholars say the decision will disrupt studies.

By Warren Richey, Staff writerposted September 1, 2010 at 7:56 pm EDTMiami —

Florida-based international scholars are reacting with disappointment to a federal appeals court ruling that reinstates a ban on state university funding for travel to "terrorist" countries, including Cuba.

The decision greatly complicates the funding of a range of Florida-based research projects focusing on Cuba and other countries. Analysts say it could undercut existing research efforts, encourage top scholars to leave Florida, and deter others from studying or working at the state's public universities.

A three- panel of the 11th US Circuit Court of Appeals ruled Tuesday that a 2006 state law does not conflict with federal statutes and can be fully implemented.

Under Florida's Travel Act, no money that flows through a state university – including grants from private foundations – may be used to organize, direct, or coordinate any activities involving travel to a terrorist state.

The state law defines "terrorist state" as any country designated by the US State Department as a state sponsor of terrorism. Four countries are currently on the list: Cuba, Iran, Sudan, and Syria.

At the time it was passed, the Travel Act was viewed as an attempt by Florida's conservative legislature to further tighten the US boycott of Cuba. It was also seen by some analysts as an effort to shut down the Cuban Research Institute at Miami's Florida International University.

Although it is a state law, it relies on a federal government determination of terrorist states to set the scope of the academic travel funding ban.

A group of Florida-based scholars challenged the legality of the new measure, arguing in federal court that it must be preempted by federal laws and policies that allow scholars to travel to countries such as Cuba. They said the state's restrictive approach to scholarly travel conflicts with the federal government's more permissive approach.

The federal judge agreed with the scholars that Florida could not control the use of private foundation grant money to fund such trips, but the judge upheld the restrictions on use of Florida money for academic travel.

On Tuesday, the appeals court reversed the federal judge, ruling that Florida was within its authority to restrict all funding flowing through the state university system.

"This is a very unfortunate ruling. I am terribly saddened by it," said Howard Simon, executive director of the American Civil Liberties Union of Florida, which is litigating the case on behalf of the scholars. Simon said they are considering further review.

"I hope this is the last gasp of South Florida anti-Castro politics," he said of the state's Travel Act. "This is a dated political tactic."

The appeals court said the state law's impact on federal law and foreign policy was "too indirect, minor, incidental, and peripheral to trigger" federal preemption of the state law.

"No federal statute or regulation expressly requires states to pay for foreign travel for state university employees," the decision says. "No federal law says states cannot differentiate among foreign nations when it comes to spending for academic travel."

Word of the decision spread quickly among Florida-based scholars.

"The implications are really quite devastating," says Carmen Diana Deere of the Center for Latin American Studies at the University of Florida. "It means that scholars in Florida cannot use grant funding or federal funding to carry out research in Cuba. It also means people's research programs will be undermined."

She said that Florida-based scholars could still receive a federal license to travel to Cuba for research, but they would have to use their own funds to pay for it.

"It is really sad," said Noel Smith of the Institute for Research in Art at Tampa's University of South Florida. She said the ruling puts an end to a series of planned exchange programs between the institute and Cuba.

The Cuban Museum of Fine Arts had invited her to organize an exhibition in Cuba. And she was planning a 10-week program for American students to study in Cuba next summer. Both of those programs will now be canceled, she said.

Last week, the institute opened a show by Cuban artist Carlos Garaicoa. It will run through December 11. Since the show is already paid for, it won't be canceled. But there may not be any opportunities for similar exchanges in the future, Smith said.

Smith said preventing scholars from traveling and studying is counter-productive for Florida and the US. "The more the people of Cuba get to know us and the more we know Cubans, the better the future is going to be," she said.

The ban doesn't just disrupt the research of Cuban scholars.

Houman Sadri, a political science professor at the University of Central Florida, has just returned from a research trip to Iran. Now he's worried about how he'll pay for his next trip.

He says the restriction is counter to America's interest in knowing all it can about places like Iran and organizations like Al-Qaeda.

"My area of specialization is revolutionary states," he said. "With this law I cannot use state funds for research in Iran, Libya, and Cuba – basically all the countries I study."

Professor Sadri added, "This is my life."

One possible solution for researchers is suggested in the appeals court ruling itself. The judges wrote in a footnote on page seven of the 12-page decision that there are no legal impediments to private research foundations finding a new way to deliver funding to scholars that bypasses the Florida state university system.

"Although grantors may need to modify their grant disbursement and management procedures to work around the Act, the grantors are free to do so; the state is exerting no coercive pressure – economic or otherwise – on the grantors to discourage them from doing so," the court said in Footnote 9.

http://www.csmonitor.com/USA/Justice/2010/0901/No-travel-to-terrorist-countries-for-Florida-state-universities-court

Despite embargo, Cuba a haven for pirated U.S. goods

Despite , Cuba a haven for pirated U.S. goodsThu Sep 2, 2010 1:31pm EDT

* Pirated U.S. TV shows, movies, software abound in Cuba

* U.S.-Cuba embargo blocks legal access to most U.S. goods

* Lack of formal U.S.-Cuba relations hurts enforcement

By Esteban Israel

HAVANA, Sept 2 (Reuters) – A few weeks after Ashton Kutcher's latest comedy "Killers" premiered in the United States, the movie was already entertaining the masses in communist Cuba.

For two pesos, the equivalent of nine U.S. cents, the state-owned Yara movie theater in the heart of Havana offered Cubans a washed out and pixilated copy of Kutcher's adventures as a CIA assassin who is himself targeted for a hit.

"It's a very good flick. We just got it on DVD," says a woman in the ticket office.

The problem is that "Killers" will not be officially released on DVD in the United States until Sept. 7 and even then Cuba will be off limits due to the 48-year-old U.S. trade embargo against the Caribbean island.

But half a century of U.S. sanctions have turned Cuba into a piracy haven and a missed opportunity for U.S. businesses.

Even though the embargo forbids U.S. companies like Microsoft (MSFT.O) from exporting software to Cuba, most personal computers on the island run unlicensed copies of its Windows operating system.

Pirated copies of the latest version, Windows 7, have been available for months from vendors in Cuba.

The blue-skinned aliens of "Avatar," James Cameron's blockbuster film, appeared on Cuba's state television in February while the movie was still breaking box office records around the world.

Surfing Cuba's five television channels, all state-owned, a viewer could stumble across shows such as Disney Channel's "Hannah Montana" and NBC's "Friends," or movies like Dreamworks' "Madagascar 2".

Video games of all types are sold by software pirates in Cuba for the equivalent of about $2.

"The reality is that U.S. products and services are down there whether the companies that make them sell them or not," said Jake Colvin, Vice for Global Trade Issues at the National Foreign Trade Council in Washington.

"The frustrating thing is that U.S. companies are getting nothing for it," he told Reuters.

PIRATES OF THE CARIBBEAN?

The trade embargo, imposed since 1962 with the aim of toppling the Caribbean island's communist government, forbids most U.S. business with Cuba, with the key exception of agricultural products, and, under certain restrictions, .

Cuba's unofficial position is that the embargo limits access to so many products that it forces people to resort to piracy.

But it also does so with a certain relish, which is both the result of five decades of U.S.-Cuba hostility and a jab at the capitalist system Cuban leaders disdain.

The Business Software Alliance, a Washington-based industry group, says 63 percent of the computer programs being used in Latin America as a whole in 2009 were unlicensed and had an approximate commercial value of $6.2 billion.

But in Cuba, the piracy rate is estimated to be around 80 percent, if not higher, said Montserrat Duran, BSA director of legal affairs for Latin America.

Cuba has been more protective of its own products, having spent much time and money defending its world-famous Cohiba cigar and Havana Club rum brands in legal battles in the United States.

The National Foreign Trade Council says the current lack of formal diplomatic relations between the two nations makes it difficult for U.S. companies to raise these issues with Cuban authorities.

"Until we fix the relationship, until we have governments that talk to each other and have a better official relationship and we have rules that allow companies to interact and do business in Cuba we are not going to be able to address the problem," said Colvin.

MIXED BLESSING

Better relations, when they come, could be a mixed blessing for Cuba's financial exposure over pirated goods, one computer engineer on the island said.

"The day we finally resolve our problems with the United States, Microsoft's Bill Gates will try to collect the bill. And it will be huge," he said, asking not to be identified.

A spokesman for Microsoft declined to comment.

In the meantime, Cuba should focus on the future rather than worry about the past, said Business Software Alliance's Duran.

"Nobody expects them to pay for what has been done, but governments should legalize their products and lead by example. People need to understand that piracy is a crime similar to stealing a car," she said.

Cuba took a step toward addressing the problem last year when it developed a variant of the free, open-source operating system Linux and promoted its use in the country's computers.

Cuban leaders said conversion to Linux would ease their security concerns about the widespread use of U.S. software and create another front in their long fight to resist U.S. domination. (Editing by Jeff Franks and Doina Chiacu)

http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSN0222000820100902

Mobile Providers Seek Increased Access to Cuba

Mobile Providers Seek Increased Access to CubaInternational August 31st, 2010BroadbandBreakfast.com Staff, BroadbandBreakfast.com

WASHINGTON, August 31, 2010 – Nokia, AT&T and Verizon are petitioning the White House to loosen telecommunications export bans to Cuba, Bloomberg and other news outlets are reporting.

The Obama Administration eased some of the regulations in April 2009 and has spoken of increased engagement.

Nokia would like to sell handsets to the island, while AT&T and Verizon would like more in connecting calls and setting up service.

The Federal Communications Commission allows calls to be connected to Cuba but only if they pay Cuba a fee of no more than 19 cents a call while the Cuban government requires a fee of 84 cents a call.

Finland-based Nokia produces its North American handsets in Miami and is limited by the U.S. .

Cuba has a relatively low penetration level even after ruler lifted the ban in 2008.

http://broadbandbreakfast.com/2010/08/mobile-providers-seek-increased-access-to-cuba/

Tribunal respalda ley que obstaculiza viajes académicos a Cuba

Publicado el jueves, 09.02.10Tribunal respalda ley que obstaculiza viajes académicos a CubaPor JUAN CARLOS CHAVEZjcchavez@elnuevoherald.com

La Corte de Apelaciones del Undécimo Distrito Federal en Atlanta respaldó una polémica ley de la Florida que impide el uso de recursos para la financiación de viajes académicos y de investigación a naciones que son consideradas "patrocinadoras del terrorismo'', entre las que se encuentra Cuba.

Al anunciar su decisión, los tres jueces de la corte consideraron que las ordenanzas estatales no se contraponen al manejo de los asuntos de política exterior y otras consideraciones que están en línea con los estatutos federales.

Las normas que limitaron inicialmente los viajes educativos fueron impuestas en el 2006 por el gobernador Charlie Crist, a instancias del representante republicano David Rivera. La legislación levantó un sinfín de críticas, entre otras, debido a que no hizo mucha diferencia sobre el origen de los fondos, es decir, que tanto las aportaciones públicas como las privadas eran medidas con la misma vara.

En el 2008, una jueza federal de Miami, Patricia Seitz, declaró que la legislación para controlar los viajes era inconstitucional. Luego, el Estado de Florida apeló la decisión que finalmente trascendió esta semana.

El respaldo del tribunal se da a conocer al calor de iniciativas de la administración del Barack Obama para alentar un proceso más flexible en su política hacia Cuba y lograr la democratización de la isla.

http://www.elnuevoherald.com/2010/09/02/794443/tribunal-respalda-ley-que-obstaculiza.html

Fidel Castro pronunciará mañana discurso ante estudiantes universitarios

Publicado el jueves, 09.02.10 pronunciará mañana discurso ante estudiantes universitariosPor efeLa Habana,

La Habana, 2 sep (EFE).- El ex gobernante cubano Fidel Castro pronunciará mañana un discurso dirigido a estudiantes universitarios desde la escalinata de la de La Habana, anunciaron hoy todos los medios oficiales.

"A pocos días del inicio del curso escolar y ante el peligro de una nueva guerra en el Medio Oriente con imprevisibles consecuencias para el mundo, el Comandante en Jefe Fidel Castro les hablará a los estudiantes universitarios", indica la nota publicada por la prensa cubana.

Añade que el acto tendrá lugar en horas tempranas de la mañana y que será transmitido en directo por varios canales de radio y televisión de la isla.

En julio pasado Castro volvió por sorpresa a la escena pública después de cuatro años de convalecencia por la grave enfermedad que le obligó a delegar la Presidencia de Cuba en su hermano Raúl en 2006.

Desde entonces, el líder cubano ha protagonizado casi a diario reuniones, visitas, actos y encuentros con periodistas cubanos y extranjeros, ofreciendo hasta entrevistas exclusivas a medios internacionales.

Castro, que el 13 de agosto cumplió 84 años, se ha limitado a comentar en sus apariciones temas internacionales y en concreto a advertir sobre los peligros que corre el mundo por la amenaza de una guerra nuclear derivada de la posibilidad de un ataque de a Irán.

http://www.elnuevoherald.com/2010/09/02/794207/fidel-castro-pronunciara-manana.html

ONG piden a la UE mantener la posición común sobre Cuba

Diario Las AmericasPublicado el 09-02-2010

ONG piden a la mantener la posición común sobre Cuba

BRUSELAS (EFE).

La red de ONG "Europa-Cuba" manifestó hoy su satisfacción por los "pasos" que ha dado recientemente el Gobierno cubano, que muestran "progresos en el área de los y la democracia", pero instó a la UE a no cambiar su "posición común" hacia la isla por un marco bilateral de relaciones. Así se pronuncian en un comunicado difundido hoy las ONG españolas Asociación de Iberoamericanos por la y Fundación Hispano Cubana, junto a otras ocho organizaciones de varios países europeos.

En la nota celebran que el Gobierno de Cuba haya reconocido la existencia de "prisioneros políticos en la isla liberando un número significativo de ellos", aunque creen que la comunidad internacional debería asegurarse de que esa libertad es "incondicional" y su exilio "únicamente opcional". En ese contexto, solicitan a las autoridades cubanas la liberación "inmediata" del médico Oscar Elías Biscet y de otros presos "que han expresado su deseo de permanecer en Cuba".

Por otra parte, piden a la Unión Europea (UE) que mantenga la actual "posición común", el marco de relaciones hacia Cuba que está previsto que los Estados miembros revisen en septiembre, como "un signo del apoyo a la democracia y a los derechos humanos" en ese país.

Además, destacan que el mantenimiento de la posición común -aprobada en 1996 a instancias del entonces del Gobierno español, el conservador José María Aznar- ha sido "apoyado oficialmente" por los presos políticos liberados exiliados en España.

Señalan que, según ese texto, la UE debe apoyar el "progreso hacia la democracia en Cuba" mediante el diálogo político y la cooperación económica con La Habana y animan a la puesta en marcha de "medidas interinas" que reflejen los "recientes avances en la isla". También instan a intensificar "a nivel institucional" el diálogo con la oposición cubana.

Las ONG afirman que, si las autoridades cubanas "continúan y refuerzan" el respeto a los derechos humanos y la democracia "con más pasos positivos", la UE deberá considerar el "levantamiento oficial" de las medidas diplomáticas tomadas en 2003 -que actualmente no se aplican- a raíz de las condenas de hasta 28 años de cárcel impuestas entonces a 75 opositores.

Para las organizaciones, la UE debería sentar "criterios" que "reflejen el progreso global en el área de los derechos humanos y la democracia", unos avances que tendrían que ser revisados periódicamente. Asimismo, expresan su esperanza en que estos pasos del Gobierno cubano "marquen el comienzo de su apertura al diálogo sobre derechos humanos y democracia".

Hoy mismo, desde Japón, el presidente del Gobierno de España, José Luis Rodríguez , líder del país que más ha apoyado un cambio de la dirección de la política europea hacia Cuba, señaló que las liberaciones de presos cubanos son un factor "positivo" que debe llevar a la UE a reflexionar sobre su posición común con La Habana.

Además, se mostró convencido de que España conseguirá finalmente cambiar esa política, para lo que es necesario el apoyo unánime de todos los Estados miembros europeos.

http://www.diariolasamericas.com/noticia/106473/ong-piden-a-la-ue-mantener-la-posici%C3%B3n-com%C3%BAn-sobre-cuba

Fariñas cree que muerte de Brito es "un asesinato alevoso del totalitarismo"

Fariñas cree que muerte de Brito es "un asesinato alevoso del totalitarismo"LA HABANA (EFE)

El cubano Guillermo Fariñas, que recientemente abandonó una huelga de hambre de cuatro meses declarada por motivos políticos, dijo hoy a Efe que la muerte del venezolano Franklin Brito "es un asesinato alevoso por parte del totalitarismo".En una conversación telefónica desde su domicilio en Santa Clara (centro del país), Fariñas consideró que la muerte de Brito, quien protagonizó ocho huelgas de hambre por la presunta expropiación de sus tierras, "es responsabilidad total del gobierno chavista (de Hugo Chávez), porque a él lo llevaron al contra su voluntad".Brito falleció el lunes por la noche tras pasar 10 días en una especie de coma inducido en el Hospital Militar de Caracas, según reportó el diario El Universal.Fariñas consideró que la muerte de Brito "es un mensaje a la oposición venezolana y al mundo en general de que (en el gobierno) están dispuestos, a menos de un mes de las elecciones parlamentarias, a ir a matar con tal de quedase en el poder".Por otra parte, Fariñas señaló que en los pasados tres días ha tenido que ser tratado en dos ocasiones en el hospital, por dolencias asociadas a problemas sanguíneos y vesiculares, pero no ha llegado a ser hospitalizado pues, en su opinión, los médicos reciben "presiones" para evitar que sea hospitalizado.Con ello se refería a la enorme repercusión mediática que desató su última huelga de hambre, declarada tras la muerte de otro disidente cubano, Orlando , quien también falleció por otra prolongada huelga de hambre en demanda de ser reconocido como de conciencia.Precisamente, la cubana Yoanni Sánchez escribió hoy en su : "he sabido de la muerte del huelguista Franklin Brito. Parece que a Hugo Chávez le ha surgido su propio Orlando Zapata".

http://www.diariolasamericas.com/noticia/106391/fari%C3%B1as-cree-que-muerte-de-brito-es-oun-asesinato-alevoso-del-totalitarismo

Agramunt acusa a Pajín de "estar de farra por Cuba con el tirano Fidel"

Agramunt acusa a Pajín de "estar de farra por Cuba con el Fidel"EFE

Agramunt se ha pronunciado en estos términos tras la primera reunión celebrada en Elche con motivo del inicio del curso político junto a la portavoz popular ilicitana, Mercedes Alonso, y a cinco de los doce senadores populares valencianos, concretamente Julio de España, Alfonso Ferrado, Agustín Almodóvar, Manuel Altava y José María Chiquillo.

Asimismo, Agramunt ha dado cuenta de las 14.184 intervenciones realizadas dentro de la Cámara Alta a lo largo de la presente legislatura por los senadores populares valencianos, una media de 1.182 iniciativas por senador.

Ha resaltado que esta cifra "dista bastante de las 115 intervenciones realizadas por los cinco senadores socialistas valencianos", con una media de 23 iniciativas por cada uno.

A este respecto, ha mencionado como "senadores de peso" dentro del grupo socialista al ex de la Generalitat Joan Lerma y a Leyre Pajín, a la que ha criticado por su "afición a visitar tiranos", así como por su "negativa a recibir a los disidentes cubanos", a lo que ha añadido que el presidente del Gobierno, José Luis Rodríguez , está "en haciéndole la ola al otro tirano".

Por otra parte, ha señalado que "la única solución para España es la convocatoria de elecciones generales anticipadas", en las que ha augurado la victoria de los populares.

Asimismo, ha mostrado su apoyo a Mercedes Alonso como futura candidata por el PP a la alcaldía de Elche, aunque ha precisado que el comité electoral regional esperará la propuesta del PP ilicitano fijada para principios del próximo año.

http://es.noticias.yahoo.com/9/20100901/tes-agramunt-acusa-a-pajin-de-estar-de-f-3388ffc.html

Más presos políticos en Cuba

Más presos políticos en Cuba02/09/10PorEmilio J. Cárdenas. Ex Embajador de la República Argentina ante

El proceso de liberación de presos políticos cubanos iniciado el pasado 12 de julio como consecuencia de la mediación de la Iglesia Católica cubana pudo bien haber estado destinado a disimular el suicidio de Orlando tras 85 días de huelga de hambre y el camino similar que Guillermo Fariñas había comenzado a transitar . Porque ambos episodios generaron repulsa en el mundo entero , incluyendo la de algunos intelectuales de izquierda que hasta ahora no se habían pronunciado sobre la cuestión de los prisioneros de conciencia.

El proceso sigue adelante, aunque lentamente.

Sólo 26 de disidentes que estaban detenidos han sido hasta ahora liberados. Los demás, aún no. Sólo aquellos que se comprometen a irse de Cuba obtienen su . Lo que, en sí mismo, supone una violación a la Declaración Universal de los .

Cuba puede, pese a todo, no haber cambiado mucho. Porque acaba de producir tres nuevos encarcelamientos de disidentes. Ahora Luis Enrique Labrador Díaz, Eduardo Pérez Flores y Michel Rodríguez Ruíz. Todos ellos fueron detenidos en las escaleras de la de La Habana, el 16 de agosto pasado y trasladados a prisiones en La Habana y en la provincia de Matanzas.

Los tres pertenecen al Partido Cuba Independiente y Democrática, en un país en el que tan sólo el Partido Comunista está permitido.

El anuncio lo acaban de hacer las , organización que agrupa a las esposas de los presos políticos.

Ocurre que la que sigue presa es la libertad.

Para ella no hay, por ahora, demasiado espacio en la isla. Particularmente para la libertad de opinión, aquella que define esencialmente al ser humano. Libertad que quienes pretenden monopolizar el poder tratan de ahogar, en cuanto pueden.

http://www.clarin.com/opinion/presos-politicos-Cuba_0_328167243.html

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