``It seems incredible that you leave your homeland looking for freedom,
and you demonstrate to the American government that you are persecuted
politically, and then you find yourself in prison all over again,'' hunger
striker Raul Olivera told The Herald via telephone this week.
This intolerable internment results from U.S. policy to discourage
Cuban rafters after the 1994 balsero crisis. Since then, the United States
generally repatriates Cubans it finds at sea. A few, after very rigorous
screening, are deemed to merit protection because of likely persecution if
repatriated. Here, these folks would get political asylum. Instead, these
rafters, children among them, are sent to Guantanamo to wait while the
U.S. State Department ostensibly tries to persuade some other country to
take them -- whether the refugees want to go there or not.
The State Department says granting entry to the persecuted few who
actually get protected status might encourage hordes of Cubans to take to
rafts. But that fear didn't stop this administration from offering entry
to baseball star Orlando ``El Duque'' Hernandez when he washed up in the
Bahamas.
Short of developing a 96-mph fast ball, hunger strikers and their
brethren face indefinite detention at Guantanamo, forsaken by U.S. State
Department and immigration authorities. Without committing any crime, they
are political prisoners of U.S. policy. Does the Clinton administration
really want to play jailer to Fidel Castro's gulag?
It shouldn't. The persecuted rafters have waited enough for freedom.
Now bring them to the United States.They have suffered enough
CUBANS AT GUANTANAMO
Fleeing persecution, a few are unconscionably held in
limbo at Navy camp. Bring them to the U.S.
Copyright © 1999 The Miami Herald