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Nadine Gordimer, Nobel
laureate, fighting for the five
Such cruelty is unacceptable
Amelia Duarte de la
Rosa
SOUTH African Nadine Gordimer, 1991 Nobel Prize
for Literature, read out letter to President Obama
calling for the release of the five Cuban heroes.
Gordimer is in our country as an invited guest to
the 19th Havana Book Fair.
In
the statement, Gordimer, who had a prior interview
with family members of the Five, condemned the
torture and psychological mistreatment to which the
mothers and wives have been subjected for more than
11 years since September 12, 1998, when Gerardo,
René, Ramón, Antonio and Fernando were unjustly
imprisoned. "Such cruelty is unacceptable," the
writer stated, affirming that she had witnessed
first-hand the drama that these families, full of
dignity and fortitude, are going through.
"I ask the Obama administration for their
immediate release and also call on all citizens of
the world. Its now time to end the torment that
these five Cubans are experiencing," she emphasized
after detailing in the missive the arbitrariness of
the sentences, and the infamies committed during
their trials and appeal processes.
Rask Morakabe, a political prisoner in apartheid
South Africa, also added his voice to the
declaration. He confided to having a special
sensitivity for the case of the Five and stated that
"in South Africa, we place a great importance on it
because we suffered on account of Mandela’s
imprisonment for so many decades and, in the same
way that we engaged in a campaign for his release,
we believe that we are going to achieve the release
of the Five."
Serbian filmmaker and musician Emir Kusturica has
also joined the call for justice for the five Cuban
heroes, declaring his support for a solution of the
case in Neuquén, Argentina and demanding that the
U.S. president annul their sentences.
Translated by Granma International
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