Yesterday, Carmen Nordelo Tejera passed away. She
was the selfless mother of Gerardo Hernandez Nordelo,
a Hero of the Republic of Cuba who is unjustly
serving two life-sentences plus 15 years of
imprisonment.
What’s incredible is that only 12 days ago the
Yankee legal system released Santiago Álvarez
Fernández-Magriñá, who at the moment of his arrest
was in possession of 1500 war weapons, hand grenades
and other means to be used in terrorist actions
against our people.
It was the second batch of weapons occupied to
the CIA agent who, at the service of the US
government, has dedicated a large part of his life
to terrorism against Cuba.
It would be worthwhile that Barack Obama’s
advisors, who so often broadcast his speeches on
television, request and show to the president a copy
of the Cubavision Round Table which analyzed the
ridiculous four-year sentence in a minimum security
prison given to Santiago Alvarez for the weapons
seized from him. Worse still, his sanction was
reduced after he surrendered to the US Attorney’s
office another batch of weapons larger than the
previous one. The man had also sent a group to
infiltrate into Cuba with instructions to, among
other things, blast an explosive charge inside the
always crowded Tropicana Cabaret. There is
irrefutable material evidence of such instructions.
Another terrorist of Cuban descent, Roberto
Ferro, an ally of the Posada Carriles’ and Santiago
Alvarez’s terrorist Mafia, was arrested on July 1991
with a cache of 300 fire arms, detonators and
plastic explosive. He was sentenced to two years in
jail. In April 2006, the authorities found in hidden
compartments in his house 1571 hand weapons and
grenades. He was given a five-year prison sentence.
No matter how much is said it will never be
enough to describe the cynical US policy that
includes Cuba in the list of terrorist countries and
applies the murderous Cuban Adjustment Act only to
our nation, which it targets with an economic
blockade preventing even the sale of medical
equipment and medicines.
Yesterday, our TV Round Table listed Santiago
Alvarez crimes while it showed Miami broadcasts
where a notorious US agent, Antonio Veciana, related
the plans they had to use explosives and bullets to
murder Cuban leaders, including Camilo and Che, who
were with me at a massive rally of hundreds of
thousands of people in front of the old Presidential
Palace, or to murder me during a press conference in
Chile when I visited President Salvador Allende.
Ultimately, as the mercenary himself confessed, the
CIA hirelings were overcome by fear. And these were
only two of the many assassination plans conceived
by the government of that country.
Such misdeeds can be remembered in cold blood
except when, as it is the case now, their
description coincides with the news of the death,
after a lengthy illness, of an honest and brave
mother like Carmen Nordelo Tejera whose son has been
unfairly given two life-sentences plus 15 years of
isolated and cruel incarceration in a high security
prison. What pain could be tougher for her than the
unjust life-sentence given to his son for crimes he
never committed?
It is impossible to lay a wreath on her grave
without denouncing once again the repugnant cynicism
of the empire.
This combines with another terrible news received
this same afternoon: the official signing of the
agreement allowing the United States to establish
seven military bases in the heart of Our America to
threaten not only Venezuela but also every other
people in the Center and South of our hemisphere.
This is not the action of the Bush Administration;
it is Barack Obama who’s signing that agreement, in
violation of legal, constitutional and ethical norms,
at a moment when the fruits of the nefarious Yankee
military base of Palmerola, in Honduras, are still
there for the world to see. The military coup d’état
in that Central American country was dealt under the
current administration.
Never before had the peoples of this hemisphere
been so despised.
A country like Cuba is well aware that after the
United States has established one of its military
bases it only leaves if it wants to or it forcibly
stays as it has done in Guantanamo, for over one
hundred years. It was there that the US established
the hateful torture center whose dungeons with
numerous prisoners our distinguished Nobel Prize has
not been able to remove. As soon as the return of
the Manta base in Ecuador became effective, the
seven military bases imposed to the Colombian people
were made official. The pretext was the fight on
drug-trafficking which, like the scourge of the
paramilitaries, came up from the enormous US market
for cocaine and other drugs. The Yankee military
bases in Latin America came into existence long
before the drugs did only to be used as an
instrument of interventionism.
For half a century, Cuba has proven that it is
possible to fight and to resist. The US President
and his advisors are wrong to carry on that sordid
and contemptuous policy towards the peoples of Latin
America. We do not hesitate to take sides with the
Bolivarian people of Venezuela, its President Hugo
Chavez and his minister of Foreign Affairs, in
denouncing the infamous military pact imposed to the
Colombian people, a pact whose expansionist
provisions its authors have not even dared to make
public.
Cuba shall continue to cooperate with the
healthcare, education and social development
programs of the fraternal peoples that despite
obstacles, advances and setbacks will be
increasingly free and unbeatable.
As Lincoln said: "…you cannot deceive all of the
people all of the time."
We shall not only take flowers to the grave of
Carmen Nordelo. We shall keep on restlessly
struggling to free Gerardo, Antonio, Fernando, Ramon
and Rene, exposing the endless hypocrisy and
cynicism of the empire, and defending the truth!
This is the only way to honor the memory of the
legions of mothers and women like her in Cuba who
have sacrificed the best and most precious in their
lives for the Revolution and for Socialism.
Fidel Castro Ruz
November 3, 2009
12:35 pm