It was unclear when Cruz Leon would be tried on the terrorism
charges.
Considering the seriousness of the charges and the current crackdown on
both common and political crimes, the tribunal is likely to follow the
prosecution's recommendation.
Last week, Cuban lawmakers modified the penal code to expand the death
penalty and raise the country's longest prison sentence from 20 to 30
years. They also approved a law aimed at prosecuting dissidents who
support and promote hostile U.S. policies, such as economic sanctions,
toward Cuba.
The bombing case covers both the criminal and political.
The violent acts appeared to have been aimed at harming the communist
government's modest economic gains by frightening away the tourists who
now provide one of the country's most important sources of income.
After his arrest, Cruz Leon admitted on Cuban television to planting
bombs in three hotels and a restaurant on Sept. 4, 1997. In one explosion,
Fabio di Celmo, 32, of Italy was killed, and seven other people were
injured.
Prensa Latina said that the Attorney General's office also recommended
a 30-year prison sentence for Otto Rene Rodriguez Llerena, another
Salvadoran accused of similar terrorist acts.
Rodriguez Llerena was arrested at Havana's international airport on
June 10 with a package of plastic explosives and other items that the
government said were designed ``to undertake terrorist activities.''
Cuban officials say the men told them that their activities were
financed by the Cuban American National Foundation and organized by Luis
Posadas Carriles, a Cuban exile well-known here.
The Miami-based foundation has denied the allegations.
The New York Times reported last July that Posada Carriles had admitted
backing attempts to bomb Cuban tourist facilities. It reported he said the
foundation helped finance those attacks.
Posada Carriles later said he had lied about the involvement of the
foundation but did not deny his own alleged role.
Posadas Carriles has been accused by Cuban authorities of
responsibility for the 1976 bombing of a Cubana airliner that killed 73
people. He was twice acquitted of that action, but spent nine years in a
Venezuelan prison before escaping in 1985.
Cuban Prosecution recommends death penalty in hotel bombing case
Copyright © 1999 The Miami Herald