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Cuba to Pardon Nearly 3,000 Prisoners
Cuban President Raul Castro has unveiled plans to pardon some 3,000 prisoners for "humanitarian reasons," a group amnesty of unprecedented size, and "gradually" reform onerous laws restricting foreign travel.
Members attend a parliamentary meeting in Havana, Cuba, Friday Dec. 23, 2011. Cuba's parliament is meeting in one of its twice-yearly, private sessions to get an update from President Raul Castro. Castro unveiled plans to pardon some 3,000 prisoners for "humanitarian reasons," a group amnesty of unprecedented size, and "gradually" reform onerous laws restricting foreign travel. (Ismael Francisco/Prensa Latina) The pardons include 86 foreign nationals from 25 countries, and will take place "in the coming days," Castro said in a closing address to the National Assembly Friday.
However US contractor Alan Gross, jailed in Cuba for espionage, will not be among those released, top foreign ministry official Josefina Vidal told AFP.
Gross -- a State Department contractor arrested in December 2009 for delivering laptops and communications gear to Cuba's small Jewish community -- "will not be on the list" of foreigners to be pardoned, the official said.
Castro said factors that played into the pardon decision included requests from the Catholic Church and various Protestant churches, and the visit of Pope Benedict XVI in 2012.
The pardon is the largest ever under the communist regime, much larger that the 299 prisoners released ahead of the visit of the late pope John Paul II in January 1998.
Cubans were intensely and emotionally keen to hear about migration reform, which Castro -- the ex-defense chief who took over from his brother, revolutionary icon Fidel Castro, in July 2006 -- has promised but not yet delivered.
"I reaffirm my unswerving will to gradually introduce the changes required in this complicated area," Raul Castro said.
Many people "consider a new migratory policy an urgent issue, forgetting the exceptional circumstances that Cuba is going through," he added.
He referred to the US trade embargo on the island and Washington's alleged "subversive" policy, "always on the lookout for any opportunity to reach its known purposes."
Castro said the administration of President Barack Obama in Washington "lacked political will to improve relations with Cuba."
But he reiterated Havana's readiness to move toward normalization of relations with the United States "in all areas that can benefit both countries."
Neither the communist government nor the state-run media have given details of the migration reforms being considered.
Local experts believe Castro intends to end the requirement of exit visas (for Cubans on the island), entrance visas (for Cubans living overseas who return home) and the legal status of "permanent emigrant."
Cubans usually can only leave the country when they have received a letter of invitation from overseas. Then they have to file a request for an exit visa, just at the start of a maze-like bureaucratic process that costs about $500.
They also need entry visas from the countries to which they travel.
The price is near unaffordable in Cuba, where doctors and street cleaners alike make about 20 dollars a month.
The Roman Catholic Church and regime-friendly personalities have joined a chorus of Cubans calling for an end to the rules, including one that penalizes "permanent emigrants" from the only one-party Communist regime in the Americas.
Those who are deemed to have left illegally (permanent emigrants) in essence are classed as defectors, their homes and assets seized.
Castro did not give details about who would be released, but did say that 13 women were among the foreigners being freed. The release of foreigners would depend on "whether the governments of their countries of origin accept their repatriation," Castro said.
However the highest-profile prisoner, US citizen Gross, will not be leaving.
Gross, 62, was found guilty in March of "acts against the independence or territorial integrity" of Cuba and sentenced to 15 years in prison. He has already spent two years behind bars.
Washington renewed its calls on December 2 for his immediate release.
Earlier this month, a group of 19 US senators sent a letter to the head of the Cuban interests section in Washington, Jorge Bolano, asking the Cuban government to take into consideration the health and economic conditions of the Goss family.
"Mr. Gross has lost 100 pounds and suffers from numerous medical conditions," they wrote. "Mr. Gross's daughter and mother are both fighting cancer, and his wife is struggling to make ends meet."

14 Comments so far
Show All"Many people "consider a new migratory policy an urgent issue"
Of course they do. Most people wanna get out of there. I wonder why? I mean there's free education, free healthcare, everyone has a job...
Shhhhh...don't let the lefties hear you say that. They'll shoot you for it while telling you that the only reason why there are prisoners in Cuba is because they're all CIA spies. As for the ones that come (1 million already here and an estimated 75,000 dead at sea)...well, they too are CIA spies. Besides, that's what the Cubans in Miami say. In fact, you may even come across one or two of them that has gone to Cuba, stayed in a multi-million dollar luxury resort (built in spite the embargo...~hark!~), got laid by a jinetera and argue that you are lying and Cuba is a paradise because they've been there! and besides, it's not as if Fidel is in charge anymore or anything ~double hark!~ Oh, hell...better stop before I get too wound up on this. What's the point?
"Cuba to Pardon Nearly 3,000 Prisoners"
including those at GITMO?
vdb
You said it all in 4 words. Right on.
Mr. Gross lost '100 pounds"! Sounds like he had a fitting name and his stay in Cuba may actually improve his health. Something is going on with him and his family from the mainstream American diet and they may benefit from the totally organic locally produced food that the socialist nation of Cuba is producing. Sadly, Mr. Gross has been brainwashed by the insatiable capitalists and spied on the Cubans but not before him and his family gorged themselves on the American diet. Let us all pray for the lost American people this Christmas plagued with the sundry maladies from their decadent lifestyles.
"...they may benefit from the totally organic locally produced food that the socialist nation of Cuba is producing."
Yes! Including the organically-produced air slices that are the staple of the Cuban people's diet since 1/1/59.
"Gross -- a State Department contractor arrested in December 2009 for delivering laptops and communications gear to Cuba's small Jewish community -- "will not be on the list" of foreigners to be pardoned, the official said."
Why did the US State Department hire a contractor to deliver laptops and communications gear to Jews in Cuba? What could the possible justification for that be under a trade embargo? Don't those laptops and gear constitute trade? Why specifically were they only being delivered to the Jewish population? Did some group lobby for this? Did this special interest group underwrite the expenses of this contract?
Some interesting material on Mr. Gross and his work on wikipedia:
"Alan Gross had previously set up satellite communications systems to circumvent state-controlled channels in Iraq and Afghanistan."
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alan_Phillip_Gross
Also some interesting material on that little Jewish community:
"As reported by the Jewish Daily Forward, Cuba’s small Jewish community of less than 2,000 people who mainly live in Havana, enjoys religious freedom and has fairly good relations with the government under Raul Castro. They are also free to emigrate to Israel, with which Cuba has productive relations, although unofficially.
USAID′s 20 million dollar Cuba program authorized by a law calling for regime change in Cuba has been criticized repeatedly in congressional reports as being wasteful and ineffective, and putting people in danger.[7] Funding was held up briefly in 2010 over concerns following Gross′ arrest."
Sounds like a spy to me.
3,000 political prisoners. Cuba is improving. In fact, its record of imprisonment has gone from having one of the highest prison population per capita in the world to about 3,000. Of course, the majority either faced el paredón early on or, like my own father, got to spend 30 years in the gulag for the high crime of dissenting. Either way, the conclusion is that while Cuba seems to be moving forward in human rights, the US is going backward. All throughout my years in the US, I've often wondered who is teaching whom. Was the US teaching the Castros or vice versa? Today, I'm convinced that the Castros taught the USans what to do since I now see the same repression taking place in the US that I lived under in Cuba for 20+ years. And the release of these 3,000 political prisoners is proof of it in my view. Either way, I'm very glad for my compatriotas and the Ladies in White. From my own dad's ordeal I know that it's better to be dead than in a Cuban gulag.
How about a swap for Luis Posada Carilles ?
castrist regime betrayed peoples revolution of cuba and turned cuba into a servant of Russian social imperialism. castro overthrew batista in order to occupy his seat as dictator of cuba. cuban regime is practically a monarchy which is guarding the state capitalism system. if che guevara had lived longer, he would have struggled against castrist regime. people of cuba should struggle for a new revolution which transfers power to soviets of workers, peasants and all of toiling masses.
Strip away all the nostalgic socialist propaganda and sympathy and what you are left with is a totalitarian dynastic dictatorship not unlike North Korea (but without the nukes and with considerably better weather).
Strip away all of the U.S. self-righteous and hypocritical pronouncements about human rights and democratic freedom and what you are left with is a corporate fascist state longing for the chance to reacquire its favorite Caribbean plantation (sorry Haiti but you get honorable mention for being first runner-up!).
The Cuban people (both in Cuba and abroad) are caught in the middle and that is the real tragedy of this entire issue.
This Gross character is a state department contractor. Count on it. He was down there to destabilize the government and backed by the US Government at the very top. He was engaged in espionage. What happened to people's outrage about the Rosenbergs and their legal lynching by the US Government? That's what it was. Even J Edgar Hoover wasn't convinced of their guilt.
Now that Cuba is freeing these people who came into that country to stir up a hornet's nest at a minimum, what's the USA doing to pardon the Miami or Cuban Five, whose only crime is exposing US state sanctioned terrorims against Cuba? Also really what does this have to do with the Jewish community? Please. One Jew gets iinvolved in a US Government sponsored campaign to destabilize the Cuba government and it's something to do with Jews generally. Get real. This is one US citizen who happens to be Jewish and got involved in causing problems for people in Cuba. What about Lori Berenson who's Jewish as far as I know and had been held behind bars by Peru's right wing gang for more than a few years, but she doesn't get this kind of big time support.
She is the real deal, and to my knowledge this Gross is the fake deal backed by US power elites thus he gets lots of public exposure and publicity-- no mention of the Miami Five as solidarity groups for them I know of refer to them and virtually nothing about Berenson. Why is that?