[Congressional Record Volume 156, Number 103 (Tuesday, July 13, 2010)]
[House]
[Pages H5523-H5524]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
RELEASE OF POLITICAL PRISONERS IN CUBA
The SPEAKER pro tempore. Under a previous order of the House, the
gentlewoman from Florida (Ms. Ros-Lehtinen) is recognized for 5
minutes.
Ms. ROS-LEHTINEN. Madam Speaker, today marks the anniversary of the
horrific 13th of March tugboat massacre, in which 41 Cubans lost their
lives at the hands of the Cuban regime's Coast Guard.
Risking their lives to escape from the brutal oppression of the
Castro tyranny, the victims and the survivors of that attack 16 years
ago symbolize the ongoing struggle of the Cuban people to be free.
This anniversary serves to remind the world that the same callous
dictatorship that rammed the small tugboat and turned water cannons on
innocent Cuban men, women and children so that they could fall and
drown to death is the same dictatorship in power today.
This is a regime that trades political prisoners like baseball cards
to manipulate public opinion and advance its brutal agenda. Do not be
fooled. These are not releases. They are forced exile; means by which
the tyrannical rulers in Havana seek to eliminate their opponents. And
in forcibly removing them, the regime, yet again, is violating the
fundamental rights of these prisoners of conscience.
Having spent years in Castro's dungeons for having the courage to
stand up for the basic liberties of the Cuban people, now these brave
individuals will be banished from their homeland, courtesy of the
dictatorship and its accomplice, the Spanish government.
Faced with this prospect, nearly a dozen of the prisoners of
conscience reported to have made the list have already expressed their
refusal to leave the island upon release, including Dr. Oscar Elias
Biscet, a 2007 recipient of the Presidential Medal of Freedom.
Years ago Dr. Biscet wrote to his fellow comrades, his countrymen, of
``a movement of complacency,'' to use his words, a movement that, and I
quote him, ``tries to make Cubans devoted to freedom believe that they
should applaud and be content with receiving limited doses of freedom,
a movement which suggests that we Cubans do not deserve total freedom,
but only small tokens of it. This movement of low expectations
speculates that other fragments of freedom and democracy will
automatically follow it.''
While some will use this latest farce to reward the Cuban regime,
those who truly support freedom and democracy will heed the wise words
of Dr. Biscet.
It is no coincidence that this latest scheme promptly follows recent
legislative efforts to provide an economic lifeline to the Cuban
dictatorship. It is no coincidence that Fidel Castro chose this weekend
to make his first public appearance in years, or to do a television
interview on the Middle East to praise the enemies of freedom while
attacking our democratic ally, Israel.
But this is not the first time that the regime has used political
prisoners as pawns in its pursuit of infinite power. In 1978, the
regime released 3,600 political prisoners in exchange for the Carter
administration's easing of sanctions on the regime. Then 26 were
released for Jesse Jackson in 1984, three for Bill Richardson in 1996,
another one for former President Jimmy Carter in 2002, and 80 for Pope
John Paul II in 1998.
No sooner were these political prisoners freed than the cells once
again were then filled with those seeking freedom from Castro's
tyranny.
With a recent visit from Syria's dictator and longlasting ties with
fellow state sponsor of terrorism, Iran, the tyrants of those rogue
states are likely sharing trade secrets on how to best manipulate
foreign nations to serve their own nefarious purposes.
Syria, like Iran, is seeking nuclear capabilities, other
nonconventional weapons, ballistic missiles, and it actively supports
Islamic extremists.
Similarly, Cuba provides safe haven to known extremists from around
the world and continues to publicly defend violent organizations such
as the FARC in Colombia.
The anti-American, anti-democratic, anti-freedom agenda that these
dictators have in common presents a threat to our U.S. national
security interests.
Let us not be fooled, Madam Speaker.
For the sake of all those who have been victims of the Cuban
tyranny--including Americans like Alan Gross and the members of
Brothers to the Rescue murdered by Castro's thugs in February 1996--the
United States must not, and cannot, fall for this latest facade by the
Castro regime: Until all political prisoners are liberated; all
political parties, labor
[[Page H5524]]
unions, independent media are allowed to operate freely; and, all Cuban
people are able to fully exercise their universal rights, maximum
pressure must be exerted on the Cuban tyranny.
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