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U.S. churches will continue
to press After 53-year embargo, NCC churches ‘live in
hope’ of reconciliation by Jerry L. Van Marter Presbyterian News Service Kinnamon, speaking at the conclusion of a week-long visit
by 15 U.S. religious leaders, told the crowd of Cuban and international
journalists “we come not as politicians or diplomats but as religious
leaders. Our first responsibility is to pray for the leaders of both
countries and we will … but our churches represent 50 million Christians, so
we believe we have some influence and we’ll use it.”
Castro, Kinnamon said, “insisted that everything is on the table. All the Cubans require, he told me, is that talks be held in an atmosphere of mutual respect.”
Kinnamon said he and Castro discussed “small steps” that can be taken:
cooperation on drug and human trafficking in the Caribbean, coordinated air
traffic control (communication about the 50 weekly flights currently
operating between the The chances of even small steps to improve Cuba-U.S.
relations “are complicated in an election year,” Kinnamon conceded, “but I
am a person of faith so I always live in hope,” adding that “since 1968 the
position of the NCC (on normalization) has been strong and consistent, taken
out of our faith position of reconciliation.” The
NCC will continue to press for a review of the sentences ― anywhere from 20
years to life ― levied against the Cuban Five, who were convicted of
espionage in the
Numerous international human rights organizations have branded the sentences
― four of the five have been imprisoned for 13 years; the fifth, Rene
Gonzalez, was “freed” this fall to stringent “supervised release” and is not
allowed to leave
Of
more immediate concern to the churches, Kinnamon said, is the ability of
family members to visit the imprisoned Cubans, at least two of whom are
Kinnamon said he also raised with Castro the situation of
American Alan Gross, who has been held in a Cuban prison for more than a
year for allegedly smuggling illegal telecommunications equipment onto the
island. “[Members of the NCC delegation] met with Alan Gross and talked
about his sense of being unjustly accused and about his concern for his
family, several members of which are seriously ill, including his daughter
with cancer,” Kinnamon said. “I raised the Alan Gross case with President Castro,”
Kinnamon said. “I am not here to pass judgment but I care about him as a
person ― the humanitarian issue.”
Kinnamon said that while political and human rights discussions occupied
some of the delegation’s time, “the primary purpose of our visit has been to
be in communion and conversation with our church partners here in In
times of economic transition in
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