Showing posts with label Little Havana. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Little Havana. Show all posts

Saturday, September 22, 2012

Panderer

Paul Ryan goes to Little Havana. From the Miami Herald:

"The Republican vice presidential candidate did not mention that he once opposed the U.S. trade embargo against the island, but he pointed to his change of heart — prompted by Miami’s current and former Cuban-American Republicans in Congress, Ileana Ros-Lehtinen and Lincoln and Mario Diaz-Balart.

“They’ve given me a great education — lots of us in Congress — about how we need to clamp down on the Castro regime,” Ryan told supporters at the Versailles restaurant. “We will be tough on Castro, tough on Chávez.”

Ryan, a Wisconsin congressman, has voted against the embargo at least three times. The Midwest tends to see trade opportunities in agriculture with Cuba."

Wednesday, April 11, 2012

Only in South Florida...

Miami Marlins (when did they drop 'Florida' from their name?) skipper Ozzie Guillen expresses admiration & 'love' for Fidel Castro to a TIME reporter, gets suspended 5 games.

Monday, April 18, 2011

Get this Article to the President

The Economist, of all publications, has suggested a solution to the Posada Carriles issue that would send the admitted terrorist to Venezuela to face trial in exchange for the USAID subcontractor, Alan Gross. Gross was sentenced in Cuba last month to 15 years in prison for delivering video phones to the island's Jewish community. President Jimmy Carter returned from Havana empty-handed shortly after his conviction.

The article doesn't address the all but certain certain fallout in Little Havana, where Elián pt. II could ensue, but does point out that the initial extradition order issued by Venezuela was blocked by a Florida judge for specious reasons. The judge cited fear of torture in Venezuela, which the author claims, despite its many other problems, doesn't have a significant track record of torture.   

The Cubana flight 455 that Posada Carriles has admitted to bombing was headed from Barbados to Jamaica, could President Obama broker a deal where one of these two nations would put him on trial?

Friday, April 15, 2011

A Terrorist's Homecoming: Little Havana & Luis Posada Carriles


Recently acquitted of lying to immigration officials about his admitted role in a string of deadly 1997 bombings targeting Cuba's tourism industry, Luis Posada Carriles, returned victorious to the cradle of anti-Castro hysteria this week, Miami's Little Havana. There, members of the old-guard community feted him and raised money for his legal bills at the Big Five Club, a sort of Cuban social club and banquet hall. He was even congratulated by the latest in a long line of Cuban-American militant members of Congress from South Florida, David Rivera (whose life, by the way, reads like a soap opera).

Posada Carriles has been in the mercenary trade for decades as sort of an ideological mirror image to Che Guevara. He was briefly jailed after the revolution and took up arms against Castro during the Bahia de Cochinos invasion, though he didn't come under fire. Strangely enough, that invasion took place 50 years ago this week. Posada Carriles then spent the next 40 years directing anti-Castro and anti-communist activities across Latin America, including as the mastermind of the Cubana flight 455 bombing, which killed 73. He confessed as much to the excellent Cuba reporter Ann Louise Bardach, who told his story in his own words in Cuba Confidential, her wild ride through Miami's exile community and its sad history with the old man and the island they left behind.

Posada Carriles is a man who has caught plenty of lucky breaks. By his own account, he has survived a couple of assassination attempts and he's escaped justice in Venezuela and Panama. His acquittal last week in El Paso on lying to the feds focuses a glaring light on the fact that the US has never tried him for the bombings themselves. The Justice Dept. shouldn't close the case on Posada Carriles. The man who boasted to Bardach that he sleeps, "like a baby," ought to be held accountable. For the integrity of our own justice system and to show Latin America that we can take steps towards dismantling our double-standard on the rule of law, Posada Carriles shouldn't be allowed to become the elder statesman of Little Havana.