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With the article that follows we start
a series on specific crimes committed by the Communist tyranny against the
people of Cuba during these 42 years in power. It will not be in
chronological order but it will cover precise, clear atrocities committed
since 1959. Some of these crimes have been exposed by the media or
documented in countless books on the Cuban situation. Some are less known
and have never been publicly exposed.
We think these barbaric acts have to be brought to people’s attention in a
short and concise format so that they are never forgotten. We think that by
distributing this information we can help others understand the catastrophe
the Cuban people continue to suffer under the Communist system.
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December 2000 – XF - 3
THE CRUEL DEATH
OF WILLIAM MORGAN
One thing that has transpired
from the beginning of his tenure at the front of the Cuban dictatorship in
1959, is the all consuming hate Fidel Castro has for the American people.
The evil spirit of his personality, probably exacerbated by the writings of
Adolph Hitler’s “Mein Kampf” which was his favorite reading while an
student, plus the influence of Marx and the cruel exercise of power by Lenin
and Stalin, were shaping his unreasonable scorn and contempt for this
country. A vivid example of this hate was shown in the case of Major William
Morgan, when he was condemned to death by a firing squad.
William Alexander Morgan was
an American, a blond, blue-eyed young man from Ohio, very tough, full of
physical strength, who had been in the American army and have had some
trouble while participating in the occupation forces in Japan. He happened
to be in Havana, when forces that were against Batista attacked the
National Palace on March 13, 1957. Later he joined the “II Front of
Escambray” guerrillas fighting in the Escambray Mountains, in the central
part of Cuba, taking part in battles and ended up with the grade of Major
of the Rebel Army and took the city of Cienfuegos days before Batista ran
away.
Morgan had a particular
dislike for the manner in which communism was being introduced by Castro in
all the spheres of the new revolutionary government. At the beginning he was
involved in a conspiracy that some say he told Castro about it. He always
denied that it was his plan, just that he thought that it was too soon to
start a new revolution.
But he went back to the
Escambray Mountains and started to develop a frog farm, traveling constantly
from Havana and back to the mountains. He obtained from the American Embassy
some 6 page booklets, containing anti-Communist comic style stories, to
release them in the towns in the Escambray. But he started to have trouble
with Che Guevara and Félix Torres, the leading communist in that area. One
of his close associates was the also Major Jesús Carreras Zayas who had had
a personal encounter with Che Guevara while fighting in the mountains.
Both, Morgan and Carrera, had
become obstacles to the forces preparing a take over of the government by
communism, and were accused of carrying arms to the Escambray to start an
uprising and were therefore condemned to death by a firing squad. But since
William Morgan was an American, his death was not going to be easy, he had
to be humiliated. Let us read what Paul D. Bethel, says in his book The
Losers (1969, page 192):
“The final months of Morgan’s
life in La Cabańa are vividly portrayed by fellow inmate John Martino in his
book, I Was Castro’s Prisoner. The Martino-Morgan conversations throw
considerable light on the personality and ambitions of William Morgan. In
any event, William Morgan marched to his summary trial, singing: “As the
Caissons go Rolling Along.” At 2:30 a.m. one day in February 1961, Fidel and
Raul Castro attended his execution by firing squad. As his hands were being
tied behind his back, an unidentified voice in the shadows of the lights
beamed on Morgan shouted: “Kneel and beg for your life!” Morgan shouted
back: “I kneel for no man!” But they used a sharp-shooter, not a firing
squad, to kill him. First, a bullet was put through one knee, then one
through the other. As Morgan crashed to the ground cursing the Communists,
the same unidentified voice from the shadows exulted: “There! You see, we
made you kneel!” The rifleman put another bullet through one of Morgan’s
shoulders. He took his time putting a bullet through the other, prolonging
the agony of his victim. Then a captain walked up to Morgan and emptied a
clip from his Tommy gun into his chest. That is how William Morgan died.”
Considering that in the
presence of Fidel Castro no one else talks, there can be no doubt as to whom
the voice in the shadow was.
This is a nice portrait of Castro's hate for his country. To those trying to
sell him as a revolutionary victim of "Imperialism" let us remind them of
the naked nature of this felon.
(Sources for this article
came from the books "The Losers" by Paul D. Bethel; "Cuba en Guerra" by
Enrique Encinosa; "Freedom, A Journal of the Free Cuban" and personal
interviews of witnesses of that era.) MLT
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November 2000 –XF – 2
THE MASSACRE AT “LA
CAMPANA” CAMP
From the first few days
after January 1, 1959 when the revolution against Batista triumphed, many
Cubans that had participated in one way or another in that event started
to question the leadership of Fidel Castro, his tendency to become the
only and absolute power, and his lack of respect of others opinion. His
sinister way of disposing of those he considered had been involved in the
Batista regime made the revolution look like a pool of blood. As the days
progressed, the image of a new dictatorship was being projected.
But Castro managed to
capture the people’s favor and whoever disagreed with him was in trouble.
A new ingredient was becoming clear, slowly Communism was being
established as a new form of government. Many who had fought against
Batista considered this treason and began to leave the country. Others
were jailed for protesting this betrayal. Many others decided to go back
to the mountains as guerrilla fighters against this new, in embryo,
Communist tyranny.
Guerrillas began to organize
throughout the island. The Escambray Mountains in the central province of
Las Villas became the main natural point of resistance to the new regime.
In those mountains guerrillas had done their work against Batista and were
less influenced by Castro, who had been doing his part in the Sierra
Maestra Mountains on Oriente Province. It was becoming something serious.
By the summer of 1960 Castro
decided to send thousands of troops to the Escambray Mountains to quell
the growing uprising. Persecution was fierce and although the rebels
lacked armaments, they heroically resisted. But Castro had learned a lot
from Stalinist tactics. He knew that he had to show some kind of victory
and for that, names that meant something in the revolutionary forces had
to pay with their lives. By the middle of September it was announced that
Plinio Prieto and Sinesio Walsch were going to be on trial in Santa Clara,
and with them a total of 170 prisoners. With these guerrillas captured,
so they said, things in the Escambray Mountains would calm and the
rebellion would be over.
Who were these men that
would have to pay with their lives in order for Castro to show other
revolutionaries the price they would have to pay in rebelling against his
Communist system?
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Capt. Porfirio Remberto
Ramirez Ruiz was one. A fighter in the Escambray against the Batista
forces; a tall, strong, young man, raised in a farm near Santa Clara,
President of the student body of the Central University “Marta Abreu”
in Las Villas Province. He was captured at the beginning of October,
close to “Pico Tuerto” in the mountains, after fighting hunger and
thirst and with no more ammunition.
(Click
on the photo to view it on a larger size).
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Mayor Plinio Prieto Ruiz
was another. He also fought against Batista’s regime, was very
respected in the forces of the revolution and had been going back and
forth to the United States trying to supply arms to the new guerrilla
forces. A teacher by profession who had come to take charge of the
fighting in the Escambray, he was captured in the town of Cumanayagua.
(Click on the photo
to view it on a larger size). |
The third man, Capt. Sinesio
Walsh Rios, was a formidable guerrilla fighter in charge of various rebel
groups in the mountains. He had been captured with several of his men,
with almost no ammunition, close to “Nuevo Mundo” where he had his camp.
All these men had succumbed to Castro’s superior numerical force that were
well trained and very well equipped.
To these three warriors were
added Angel B. Rodriguez del Sol who had been Assistant to Major Andrés
Nazario Sargén in the previous war against Batista in the Escambray
Mountains and José Palomino Colón, a respected member of the
Constitutional Army before the revolution.
The trial was scheduled to
be held at the “Libertad” Theater in the Military Camp “Leoncio Vidal” in
Santa Clara on October 12, 1960. Members of Castro’s Rebel Army, who had
absolutely no legal knowledge, formed the Court. Juan Escalona, a member
of the Communist Party, was the prosecutor. By the end of the day they
told the family members of the accused that the sentence would be decided
the next day.
But by nine o’clock at
night that same 12th day of October in the military camp of “La Campana”
close to Manicaragua, on the outskirts of the Escambray Mountains, they
were positioning cars and army trucks that would provide the light
necessary to comply with a sentence that had not yet been officially
decided and could not be disputed because it had come directly from Castro
in Havana.
The firing squad that
executed these five patriots did not use rifles. They used Czech-made
machine-guns, making a bloody massacre of their bodies. Those who were
present, such as father Olegario de Cifuentes, a priest from “La Pastora
Church” in Santa Clara, related afterward that as the killing was done,
the executioners were paralyzed and no one moved to get close to the
victims. It was as if they felt the horror of what they had done.
The rebellion was not over
as Castro had said. The Escambray Mountains remained a stronghold for
freedom for five more years until 1965.
(Sources
for this article came from the books, CUBA EN GUERRA by Enrique Encinosa
and DIARIO DE UNA TRAICION by Leovigildo Ruiz. Other sources include
BizLand.com, an article by Laida Arcia Carro,
www.cubamemorial.org, LavozdeCubaLibre@aol.com
and personal interviews. MLT)
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October 2000 – XF-1
THE DELIBERATE
SINKING OF THE TUGBOAT “13 DE MARZO” BY THE CUBAN AUTHORITIES
On July 13, 1994 from the
town of Regla near Havana, the tugboat “13 de Marzo” started its trip to
freedom. Seventy-two Cubans, men, women and children had decided to leave
their home country to see if they could find freedom in the United States.
But the Cuban authorities had another plan, somehow they were aware of what
was about to happen and one “Polargo” type government boat was waiting for
them and as soon as they got out of the bay, the authorities started to
spray cannons of water on the tugboat. Women raised their children on their
arms pleading for them to stop the water attack, to no avail. Two more
“Polargo” boats surrounded them and started to circle around, ramming the
“13 de Marzo” until they cracked the scull of the old boat and it began to
sink.
For forty minutes the three
boats continued circling the sinking boat. About 30 people were trapped
inside and never got out. Some jumped into the ocean but instead of helping
them, the “Polargo” crews continued to spray water on them and intensified
the velocity to create a whirlwind situation to make surviving more
difficult. Evidently they did not want to leave any survivors of this
tragedy. As in previous similar cases there should be no witness.
All of a sudden they stopped
the attack on the survivors and a Cuban Coast Guard boat, who had been a
silent witness of what was happening, pull them out of the water and took
them back to Havana.. It happened that a Greek ship coming into port was
also witnessing the whole incredible operation and the three “Polargo” crews
could not finish the massacre.
Out of 72 that intended to
escape in the “13 de Marzo,” 41 were assassinated, 23 of them children.
Some of the 31 survivors
later escaped from Cuba and have been recounting this horrible genocide
experience to the U.S. Congress (on February 1995 by Sergio Perudin,) to the
United Nations Assembly and Human Rights Organization throughout the world.
Janet Hernández, one of the
survivors, reminiscing on the experience says: “Sometimes I think
everything was a nightmare. But the horrific screams of the mothers who lost
their children and the little hands sinking forever to the bottom of the sea
and the crying sorrow we all shared…is real.”
A crude example of what
Castrocomunism is all about.
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Partial information used for
this article is from Diario Las Americas and El Nuevo Herald from Miami,
Contacto Magazine from Los Angeles and La Voz de Cuba Libre and other
Internet sources.
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