Clinton asks Jewish support to free worker in Cuba
By MATTHEW LEE
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON -- Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton on Tuesday urged
Jewish groups to join the campaign to persuade Cuba to release a U.S.
government contractor detained on the communist island for seven months
without charge.
Clinton told representatives of the American Jewish community that they
should add their voices to calls for Cuba to release Alan P. Gross, a
U.S. Agency for International Development contractor who was helping
members of Cuba's small Jewish community use the Internet to stay in
contact with each other and with similar groups abroad.
"Alan was providing information and technology that would assist this
community to be better connected," Clinton said at a State Department
reception in honor of Hannah Rosenthal, the Obama administration's
special envoy to monitor and combat anti-Semitism. Gross' wife, Judy,
attended the event.
"Our government works every single day through every channel for his
release and safe return home," Clinton said. "But I am really making an
appeal to the active Jewish community here in our country to join this
cause ... because this family deserves to be reunited and each and every
one of us should do everything we can to make it clear to the Cuban
government that Alan Gross needs to come home."
Gross, a 60-year-old native of Potomac, Md., was working in Cuba for a
firm contracted by USAID when he was arrested as a suspected spy in
Havana on Dec. 3. He has been held without charge in the capital's
high-security Villa Marista prison since.
The U.S. says Gross committed no crime and has repeatedly appealed for
his release on humanitarian grounds. In May, the head of Cuba's high
court said prosecutors had yet to open a legal case against him. Formal
charges can't be filed in Cuba without a judicial accusation and the
opening of a case, so it appears unlikely charges against Gross are
imminent.
Judy Gross has said her husband had brought communications equipment
intended only for humanitarian purposes and not for political use by
Cuba's small dissident community. Satellite phones and other
telecommunications materials are outlawed in Cuba, where the government
maintains strict control over Internet access and the media.
Clinton's appeal to the U.S. Jewish community followed the release on
Tuesday of seven jailed Cuban dissidents who were sent to Spain, the
first of 52 political prisoners to be freed under an agreement worked
out between Cuban authorities and the Catholic church."
http://www.miamiherald.com/2010/07/13/1729241/clinton-asks-jewish-support-to.html
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