Wednesday, November 14, 2012

Journalist for Cuba’s Granma convicted of spying

Posted on Wednesday, 11.14.12

Journalist for Cuba's Granma convicted of spying

José Antonio Torres was charged after writing about mismanaged public
works project.
By Juan O. Tamayo
jtamayo@ElNuevoHerald.com

A journalist with Cuba's Granma newspaper was sentenced to 14 years in
prison for spying, a charge filed soon after he reported on the
government's mishandling of a critical construction project, according
to dissidents.

José Antonio Torres was the correspondent for Granma, the official
publication of the Central Committee of the ruling Communist Party, in
the eastern city of Santiago de Cuba, the island's second largest.

Arrested in February 2011 and tried around mid-June, he was sentenced
more recently to 14 years in prison and the suspension of his university
degree in journalism, said dissident José Daniel Ferrer Garcia.

Cuba's government-controlled news media has made only a few brief
references to the Torres case, despite his well-known reporting and the
charge against him. Only about a half-dozen Cubans are known to be
jailed on spying charges.

Ferrer, head of the dissident Cuban Patriotic Union, said he received
information on Torres from government opponents jailed in the same
prisons on the outskirts of Santiago, at first Aguadores and more
recently Boniato.

"We know he appealed the 14-year sentence but fears a worse outcome"
because the appeals court could increase it, Ferrer told El Nuevo Herald
by phone from his home in Palmarito de Cauto in Santiago province.
Prosecutors sought a 15-year sentence.

Torres also has not had conjugal visits with his wife in 20 months,
Ferrer added, a sign that government security officials may be trying to
persuade his wife to cut off their relationship.

The journalist insists he is innocent and that the government will
eventually realize its "mistake" in putting him in prison, Ferrer noted.
Torres has rejected his many requests for details of the case so that
dissidents can publicize his defense.

Ferrer paraphrased him as saying that he "trusts in the revolution's
justice, and that he does not want any relations with
counter-revolutionaries."

Little is known of the spying charge, Ferrer added, although one
unconfirmed version has Torres depositing a CD with confidential
information in the mailbox of the U.S. diplomatic mission in Havana.

The Spain-based blog Diario de Cuba reported earlier this year that
Torres apparently had sent a letter to the mission offering to provide
information about military targets and government officials in Santiago.

Torres was arrested after Granma published his 5,000 word report on the
scandalous mismanagement of the construction of an aqueduct for Santiago
province, a marquee government project in a region long marked by water
shortages.

The July 2010 report used words like "errors," never corruption, and
noted in neutral terms that Vice President Ramiro Valdés, one of Cuba's
most powerful officials and the project's supervisor, had indicated that
the situation was improving.

Cuban ruler Raúl Castro heaped unusually public praise on Torres for the
article, writing in a postscript to the Granma article that "this is the
spirit that should characterize the (Communist) Party press,
transparent, critical and self-critical."

The postscript also praised Valdés for his handling of the project, even
though the two men reportedly clashed often in the 1960s and 1970s, when
Castro was minister of the armed forces and Valdés was minister of the
interior, in charge of domestic security.

Torres may have kicked up more dust four months later when he wrote
about the fiber optic cable laid from Venezuela to Siboney Beach just
east of Santiago. He noted that Valdés, at the time minister of
communications, was supervising that project.

Several ministry officials were arrested later on corruption charges
apparently linked to the cable. Valdés was promoted out of the ministry
in early 2011 to an at-large job supervising the ministries of
communications, construction and hydraulic resources.

http://www.miamiherald.com/2012/11/14/3095676/journalist-for-cubas-granma-convicted.html

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