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Posted on Sat, Dec. 22, 2007
1960s Cuban fighters gain refugee status

BY PABLO BACHELET
Cubans who supported an anti-Castro guerrilla group more than four decades ago will become eligible for U.S. refugee status thanks to provisions in a big spending bill passed by Congress.
The group known as the Alzados operated in the Escambray mountains in south-central Cuba, with some U.S. support, until Cuban security forces crushed them in a massive sweep in 1966.

But under the Patriot Act and the Real ID Act, those who join or materially support an armed revolt against a government are considered members of a terrorist organization and thus ineligible for refugee status.

The text exempting the Alzados, authored by Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., was inserted in a $555 billion spending bill passed just hours before Congress recessed this week.

The bill, which funds 11 government agencies plus the Afghanistan and Iraq wars, is awaiting President Bush's signature. Other groups exempted include the Hmong fighters in Laos, the Vietnamese Montagnards and several Burmese groups.

''Many of these people were our allies,'' said Leahy, who chairs the appropriations panel that oversees the State Department and Foreign Operations. ``They were there for us when we needed them, and we should not turn our backs when they need the safety of our shores.''

The Escambray fighters, mostly poor peasants, battled government forces with limited, if any, support from the CIA. The Castro government called them bandidos.

Since most of the original fighters are either dead or already in the United States, it is believed that many of those now applying for asylum are probably friends and relatives who assisted the Alzados.

In February, the Bush administration issued a ''material support exemption authority'' that made it easier for individuals who provided help to the Cuban rebels to win asylum. Since then, 218 individuals have obtained asylum, according to the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, a unit of the Department of Homeland Security.

There are around 100 individuals still waiting for asylum, and CIS spokesman Christopher Bentley said his office needed time to review how the Leahy provisions could apply to these cases, if at all.

The Patriot Act defined terrorism as ''any activity which is unlawful under the laws of the place where it is committed'' and includes any use of explosives, firearms or other weapons intended to cause death or property damage


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This fight by these courageous men/women/guajiros against Castro's betrayal of the Revolution should never be forgotten. The forced displacement of thousands of people who were accused of helping the fighters far from their land..should never be forgotten.
Just goes to show you that one man's hero is another man's terrorist. Sorry Lillian but under these same rules the Mujahidin, Janjaweed and even some of the Taliban could be considered for refugee status at one time or another depending on which side of the bed Bush s*&t on the night before. The Taliban were considered at one time by America to be HEROS because they almost wiped out the opium trade out of Afganistan. Now it's back even stronger than ever.
If you want to see how fucked up things are... rent "The Devil Came on Horseback". You talk about thousands displaced..... I'm talking about MILLIONS!
It's impossible to tell the good guys from the bad guys now.
Rainbow, understood. But I am of the philosophy that any inhumanity..even to a single individual is to be despised and repudiated. Because of our prevalent inhumanity both you and I can site hundreds of thousands of historical examples that sadly only vary in numbers..but not in their common essential barbarity. Nevertheless, this posting in this section is apropos.
These men and women are to be honored and recognized. We can argue the reasoning and the politics behind such declaration by Congress…but that cannot, should not detract or obfuscate from the facts.
Facts which are only known by the victims until recently…as they have been one more group whose history has been hidden by the many veils of revisionist history, propaganda and the ignorant supporters and excusers of the Castro regime.
Solution is just too simple: keep 'em ALL out! That's fair and equitable, isn't it?
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