The risk remains
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Opdateret den 02 september, 2000

June 24, 2000

Elián’s detention: the risk remains

• President Fidel Castro sends message to more than 400,000 Cubans
assembling in Holguín today, June 24 • Acknowledges support of U.S.
people in the battle to liberate Elián • What was done to Shaka Sankofa
contradicts universally accepted doctrines and principles

LATENT risks that should not be underestimated still exist. If just one member of the U.S. Supreme Court accepts the already announced injunction appeal, Elián and his family will have to remain in that country for months. President Fidel Castro expressed this warning in a message read out this morning, June 24, to more than 40,000 Cubans gathered in Plaza de la Revolución Mayor General Calixto García, in the eastern province of Holguín, to demand the liberation of the Cuban child; the disappearance of the Cuban Adjustment, Helms-Burton and Torricelli Acts; and an end to the U.S. blockade.

The massive rally was attended by Vice President Raúl Castro and Majors of the Revolution Juan Almeida Bosque and Guillermo García Frías.

Fidel argued that the Miami mafia and their allies on the extreme right in the United States still have power and a margin for maneuver. "They will not hesitate for an instant to use them," he confirmed.

He added that even when Elián and his father return to the island, Cubans will still have in front of them the unremitting battle against the Helms-Burton and Torricelli Acts, the dozens of U.S. Congress amendments designed to strangle our country, the criminal blockade, economic warfare, and the incessant policy of subversion and destabilization against "a Revolution initiated more than 130 years ago."

Fidel recalled that in the hardest days of the battle for Elián’s liberation, the support of the U.S. people as a whole rose to 70%, "which should not and will not be forgotten." Within that support, which he described as decisive and admirable," he noted than 90% of African Americans defended the rights of the child and his father.

In that context, he referred to the execution in Texas of Shaka Sankofa, who, he said, "was murdered." Subsequently, the Cuban president noted that independently of the legal infractions attributed to Shaka with great emphasis by his executioners when he was an marginalized adolescent living in conditions of poverty and racial discrimination, "what is unquestionable is that he was sentenced to death for an alleged homicide when still a minor, without any consideration or compassion whatsoever, and without his guilt even having been proven."

Fidel went on to affirm: "Everything done to him is in contradiction with universally accepted legal doctrines and principles."

After his comments on the irregularities committed with Sankofa, the Cuban leader stated that "it is generally believed in the United States and throughout the world that he was sentenced to death and executed simply for being black," on top of "the monstrous deed of subjecting him for 19 years to the funeral chapel or what is more bluntly known as death row."

Fidel emphasized that "Shaka Sankofa has shown the world the bitter fruit of a social system where differences between the richest and the poorest are infinite and where individualism, egotism, consumerism, a generalized use of firearms and violence reign as a philosophical foundation."

 

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