Last year a federal judge ruled that Cuba was guilty of that despicable
act and awarded $187.6 million in damages to the families of three of the
four dead fliers engaged in a humanitarian mission. The Cuban government
ignored the proceedings and didn't bother to send lawyers.
After the U.S. government blocked attempts to collect damages from
long-frozen Cuban assets, the families went after the millions currently
paid by U.S. phone companies to ETECSA, a joint venture 59 percent owned
by Cuba's government. Lawyers for ETECSA and the U.S. phone companies
argued against the families getting the money. No surprise there.
Unjustifiably, the U.S. government weighed in on the same side as Cuba.
It argued that broader U.S. national interests outweigh the interests of
the families. Since when aren't human rights in the national interest?
The families, wanting justice, simply followed the rule of law. They
went to civil court to get it. That's because of U.S. failure to charge
the culpapble Cubans in criminal court. It should. The civil case already
provided enough evidence that Cuba deliberately murdered Armando
Alejandre, Carlos Costa, Pablo Morales and Mario de la Peña. Recent
revelations by Richard Nuccio, then White House special adviser on Cuba,
add to the case. Cuban pilots, it seems, even practiced the attack.
Obviously Cuba's regime does not play by the rule of law until its
treasury is affected. Since January it has been threatening to cut off
phone service to the United States, one of the few lifelines of the Cuban
people. After the courtroom debate last week, Cuba warned that it will
stop calls if the six main U.S. long-distance providers don't pay up by
tomorrow, the third anniversary of the fliers' deaths.
``The Cuban government considers this a totally reasonable position,''
Cuba's Foreign Ministry proclaimed, ``especially when the lack of payment
is to satisfy the opportunistic appetite of a group of immoral exiles
. . . taking advantage of the manipulable nature of the judicial
system.'' Nothing could be more cynical.
Cuba's state murdered in cold blood, tells its judiciary what to rule
and is the one to blame if phone service is cut.If phones go dead . . .
IT'S CUBA'S FAULT
Make it pay for shooting down innocent
civilians.
Copyright © 1999 The Miami Herald