Restoration of Cuban diplomacy, release of Cuban five overdue-GCSM President

KhanGeorgetown: President of the Guyana Cuba Solidarity Movement (GCSM) Haleem Khan has welcomed the move by the Obama administration to restore full diplomacy with Cuba while simultaneously releasing U.S. contractor Alan Gross in exchange for three members of the Cuban Five, who spent more than 15 years in American jails on trumped up spying charges.

Gerardo Hernandez, Ramon Labanino and Antonio Guerrero were released on Wednesday (17, December, 2014) and flown back to their homeland — ending what their appeals lawyer called "an arduous experience.”

Khan said Cuba had requested a swap. Amnesty International and a United Nations group have both said that they did not receive a fair trial.

Labanino, 51, and Guerrero, 56, have received visits from family while they have been jailed, but Hernandez, 49, has only seen his wife once because she was deported after his arrest, Khan noted.

Two other members of the Cuban Five — Rene and Fernando Gonzalez — were released in 2012.

All the men were arrested in 1998 and accused of belonging to a spy cabal called the Wasp Network that had infiltrated anti-Castro exile groups in Florida. The five were convicted in 2001, and Hernandez got two life sentences after being found guilty of conspiracy to murder. The Cuban five maintained they never targeted the U.S. government and that they were on a mission to monitor Miami-based terrorist groups plotting to attack Havana. Their convictions were criticized by the United Nations and Amnesty International.

At one point, the verdicts were overturned by a federal appeals panel that found the men did not get a fair trial in Miami, though the convictions were later reinstated. Hernandez, Labanino and Guerrero still had appeals pending when they were released.

Meanwhile, Gross was arrested in December 2009 for smuggling satellite equipment to Cuba as part of a U.S. government pro-democracy program and was sentenced to 15 years in prison.

He had been in poor mental and physical health. Gross had been planning to end his life in the near future as a result of his imprisonment. Last April he went on a hunger strike that lasted for nine days and only ended at the request of his mother, Evelyn Gross, who died in June.