Spanish Aznar
deputy attempts to enter Cuba illegally
ON Saturday October 16, the Cuban
authorities reported that Spanish deputy Jorge
Moragas had been deported from Cuba after "attempting
to enter our territory fraudulently and illegally
under the migratory status of a tourist."
A note from the Ministry of Foreign
Affairs specified that the Popular Party
representative and "staunch enemy of the Cuban
Revolution" arrived on the evening of October 15 on
the Air France Flight 479 and the migratory
authorities proceeded to escort him onto the return
Paris flight.
The message reads that Moragas was
accompanying two Dutch parliamentarians and two
representatives from alleged NGOs that are engaged
in anti-Cuban activities in Spain and the
Netherlands, and these individuals were also
returned.
The note from the Foreign Ministry
states that the Spanish deputy’s arrival was
preceded by a noisy propaganda campaign.
The Popular Party, it goes on to say,
released a statement last Thursday confirming that
Moragas was to travel to Cuba with the aim of
offering "support and solidarity" to mercenaries
operating in Cuba under the pay of the United States.
The deputy himself made a statement
to that effect that was published on October 14 and
15 by the EFE and Europa Press news agencies,
according to the message.
The Cuban Ministry of Foreign
Affairs indicated that "the activities they publicly
declared as the aims of their trip constitute a
flagrant violation of our sovereignty and are
anticipated and sanctioned in our legislation. This
is a gross political provocation against Cuba."
It added that Moragas is well-known
"for his longstanding links with the failed and
pathetic José María Aznar, who is currently
enthusiastically devoting his time to spending the
five million dollars that U.S. President George W.
Bush recently awarded him in order to organize anti-Cuba
activities and events."
It adds that the Spanish citizen and
PP international secretary has carried out repeated
anti-Cuban activities in the Spanish parliament.
The statement recalls that this is
the second occasion on which Moragas has traveled to
Havana to make contact with and offer financial
support to the mercenaries.
Last July, the note went on, he also
entered the country on a tourist visa, an occasion
on which, with extraordinary moderation and patience,
the authorities confined themselves to warning him
there would be no impunity for such acts.
"We have the sovereign right to
defend ourselves, our patience has limits and we
will not remain silent over interfering behavior or
provocations by enemies whom, at the service of U.S.
policy, are attempting to subvert the internal order
of our country," concluded the note from the Cuban
Foreign Ministry. (AIN)