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| Cuban Interest Section in Washington | 
Ambassador Jorge A Bolaños´ Letter to CNN Anchor Wolf Blitzer
May 5, 2012 
Wolf Blitzer 
The Situation Room
CNN America, Inc.
820 First Street NE
8th Floor
Washington D.C. 20002-4243
The Situation Room
CNN America, Inc.
820 First Street NE
8th Floor
Washington D.C. 20002-4243
Dear Mr. Blitzer:
In
 connection with your conversation with Mr. Alan Gross, broadcasted on 
May 4, 2012 in "The Situation Room", I'm writing to request that my 
government's positions on the case be equally made known. These are: 
1.  The
 Cuban government has conveyed to the U.S. government Cuba's willingness
 to find a humanitarian solution on reciprocal basis to the case of Mr. 
Gross.
2.  Mr.
 Gross was not convicted for helping Cuban Jewish to connect to the 
Internet. All Cuban synagogues have Internet; they had Internet before 
Mr. Gross came to Cuba. 
3.  Mr.
 Gross violated Cuban laws by implementing a U.S. government program 
aimed at attempting against Cuba's constitutional order. The undercover 
activities of Mr. Gross in Cuba constitute crimes in many countries, 
including in the United States. 
4.  During
 his visits to Cuba, Mr. Gross never told the people he contacted that 
he was working for the U.S. government. He is not an activist who came 
to Cuba to assist the Cuban people; he is a professional paid for by the
 U.S. government. Mr. Alan Gross is in good physical conditions, he 
receives specialized medical care, balanced meals, regular consular 
access, visits by friends and political and religious personalities. He 
has had visits by his wife and he maintains systematic and stable 
communication with his family. The cases of Rene Gonzalez and Alan Gross
 are very different. Rene served his sentence to the last day, and he 
remains in the U.S. against his will, away from his family. The decision
 by a Florida federal judge to allow Rene to travel to Cuba is in line 
with the conditions imposed for Rene's supervised release, which allow 
his traveling to Cuba, following authorization by the probation officer 
or the court. His wife Olga is not even allowed to visit him during his 
term of supervised release. 
5.  The
 Cuban government has facilitated all visits by family members, friends,
 religious figures and political personalities that have requested 
access to Mr. Gross. These conditions are very different from the cruel 
regime of solitary confinement that has been arbitrarily meted out 
against the Cuban Five: Gerardo, Ramon, Antonio, Fernando and even Rene.
 They have strict restrictions against giving interviews to the U.S. 
press. 
6.  The
 Five have been almost 14 years in U.S. prisons, for gathering 
information on terrorist groups conducting attacks against Cuba from the
 U.S. Such information helped save lives in both countries. The Five 
were not in the possession of government secrets nor did they attempt 
against the U.S. security. 
7.  Contacts
 by the Five with their families have faced obstacles and two of them, 
Gerardo and Rene have not been visited by their wives, Adriana and Olga.
 Gerardo's mother died while he was in prison, and the mothers and 
fathers of the other four are very old. Gerardo and his wife have not 
been able to conceive a child. 
Sincerely, 
Jorge A. Bolaños Suárez
Chief of the Cuban Interests Section
Washington DC
Jorge A. Bolaños Suárez
Chief of the Cuban Interests Section
Washington DC
 
 
 
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