Court to hear Posada extradition case Aug. 29
By
Teresa Gutierrez
Published Aug 25, 2005 3:28 AM
It is off the front pages in the U.S. media,
but news of the case of Luis Posada Carriles is very much a hot topic in
Venezuela and Cuba.
And in the progressive and Cuba solidarity movements
in the United States, the demand to extradite Posada Carriles to Venezuela
continues to gather momentum. National actions demanding extradition will be
held on Aug. 29 throughout the United States. That same day Posada
Carriles’ immigration status is scheduled for review in a court in El
Paso, Texas.
Luis Posada Carriles was taken into U.S. custody in Miami on
May 17 and detained on immigration charges. The arrest came only after an
intense international campaign denouncing Posada Carriles’ terrorist
actions against Cuba and elsewhere.
The case quickly became an Achilles
heel for the Bush administration.
People around the world and in the
United States were outraged by the fact that the Bush administration had waged a
so-called “war against terror” while the U.S. government was
harboring a known terrorist, Posada Carriles.
A wealth of information
documents the infamous history of terrorist acts against Cuba carried out by
Posada Carriles. The information has been reported in news
accounts—including Posada Carriles’ own admission to the New York
Times in 1998.
Now declassified CIA documents detail his acts of terror,
and his collaboration with the CIA.
Posada Carriles is the chief plotter
behind many assassination attempts against Cuba’s President Fidel Castro
as well as bombs set in Cuba’s tourist sites.
Posada Carriles
orchestrated the bombing of a Cubana airliner in 1976 that killed 73 people.
Plans as well as the bombs themselves were made at two Hilton Hotels in Caracas,
Venezuela.
Venezuela demands extradition
The government of
Venezuela is requesting the extradition of Posada Carriles because the Cubana
airline tragedy was hatched in that country.
The case for the extradition
of Posada Carriles to Venezuela is strong. If the U.S. government refuses or
circumvents it, this would be a blatant violation of international law.
A
well-known Cuban-American lawyer in Washington, D.C., José Pertierra, an
expert on immigration law, is currently employed by the Venezuelan government to
represent it in the extradition case. In a June 22 interview with a progressive
Cuban American radio station in Miami, Pertierra explained why the case for
extradition is so strong.
Pertierra pointed out that the standard for
extradition requests is broad. “It is not necessary to demonstrate
guilt,” he said. “It is enough to demonstrate probable cause that
the individual is guilty.”
The case has strong legal grounds, too,
because of the 1922 Treaty of Extradition between the United States and
Venezuela.
In the United States, extradition cases are handled by the
state department. Venezuela has submitted a wealth of material documenting
Posada Carriles’ role in the Cubana Airline incident.
The material
includes Hernán Ricardo’s confession. Ricardo placed the bomb in
the Cubana airliner. He admits being an agent for Posada Carriles.
Posada
Carriles, a naturalized Vene zuelan citizen, entered the United States in March
without documents. He was in Miami illegally—and even held a news
conference announcing his presence.
Posada Carriles has filed for
political asylum. He says he wants to remain in the United
States.
According to Pertierra, state department regulations establish
that the extradition process takes precedent over Posada Carriles’
immigration process.
If the federal judge determines on Aug. 29 that there
is a case for extradition and Posada Carriles is denied asylum, the case goes to
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice. Pertierra says that Rice has three options:
She can extradite, refuse to extradite or she can extradite while placing
conditions on Venezuela.
For over 45 years, Cuba has worked hard to expose
the role of the likes of Luis Posada Carriles in their horrific crimes against
the Cuban people. But he, along with other counter-revolutionaries such as
Orlando Bosch, have been nurtured and protected by the U.S. government. The
first President George Bush, for example, pardoned Bosch despite his terrorist
activities.
It was the struggle of the Cuban people and their many
supporters in the United States and around the world that led to Posada
Carriles’ detention.
If justice is served in El Paso, Posada
Carriles will be extradited to Venezuela—where he will face a fair trial
for the charges of murder of the 73 people on the Cubana plane. No asylum should
be granted to Luis Posada Carriles. The extradition treaty between Venezuela and
the United States should be honored.
Gutierrez is the New York
coordinator of the Committee to Free the Cuban 5.
Articles copyright 1995-2012 Workers World.
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