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Wednesday, September 14, 2011
Cuban Official: Richardson Used Blackmail Against Cuba To Force Meeting With Jewish American Prisoner
Havana - Cuba accused former New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson of “blackmail” and slander on Wednesday, categorically denying his claims that he was invited to the island to negotiate the release of a jailed American government subcontractor.
In an exclusive interview with the Associated Press, the Foreign Ministry’s head of North American affairs, Josefina Vidal, said Cuba refused Richardson’s request to even see imprisoned Maryland-native Alan Gross after the American politician described him as a “hostage,” in an interview with AP.
His request to see the prisoner ... became impossible due to his slanderous statements to the press in which he described Gross as a ‘hostage’ of the Cuban government,” Vidal said.
She said Richardson undertook the trip on his own initiative and was never led to believe he would leave the island with Gross.
“The release of the North American prisoner Alan Gross was never on the table,” she said, adding that Cuba was caught by surprise when word of Richardson’s visit was leaked amid news reports that he was coming to take Gross home.
Richardson is a former U.S. ambassador to the United Nations with a long history of negotiating the release of prisoners around the world. He also had enjoyed a particularly warm relationship with Cuba’s leaders until this trip.
He said Tuesday that he was treated so poorly that he doubted he could ever return to the island as a friend.
The feeling appears to be mutual.
Vidal said Richardson’s behavior amounted to a crude attempt to box the Cuban government into a corner.
“We explained to Mr. Richardson that Cuba is a sovereign country which does not accept blackmail, pressure or posturing,” she said.
She also took exception to statements by Richardson and others that described Gross as seriously ill, saying his health is “normal, in accordance with his age and chronic ailments.”
She said he received close medical attention, as well as regular consular visits.
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