By JEREMY BARR
WASHINGTON—U.S. Rep. Chris Van Hollen, D-Kensington, met Tuesday with Alan Gross, a Potomac-based contractor under arrest in Cuba since 2009.
According to Wikipedia, in December 2009 Gross, 63, was arrested while in Cuba working as a U.S. government subcontractor for the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) as part of a program funded under the 1996 Helms-Burton Act. He was prosecuted in 2011 after being accused of crimes against the Cuban state for bringing satellite phones and computer equipment to members of Cubas Jewish community without the permit required under Cuban law. After being accused of working for American intelligence services in January 2010, he was ultimately convicted for acts against the independence or the territorial integrity of the state" in March 2011, and is currently serving a 15-year prison sentence in Cuba.
I was pleased to have the opportunity to join Senator (Patrick) Leahy in meeting with Alan Gross as part of my trip to Cuba, Van Hollen said in a statement. We discussed a wide range of issues, and I assured him we were doing everything possible to secure his immediate release.
Van Hollen attended as part of a seven-person congressional delegation led by Democratic Sen. Leahy of Vermont. The delegation, which arrived in Cuba Monday, is next headed to Haiti.
I hope that this is the beginning of a discussion on resolving this situation, said Ron Halber, executive director of the Jewish Community Relations Council of Greater Washington, which has advocated for Gross release. It can only be positive.
Halbers group has worked on a variety of initiatives—online petitions, drumming up congressional signatures and a weekly protest in front of the Cuban Interests Section in Washington—to free Gross, who, along with his wife, Judith Gross, was very active in the local Jewish community.
Van Hollens delegation also met with Cuban President Raul Castro, who has led the country since 2008.
I indicated to President Raul Castro that the release of Mr. Gross is essential if we are to going to improve the relationship between the United States and Cuba something I believe is in the interest of both of our countries, Van Hollen said.
Judith Gross has expressed concerns about her husbands health. She sent a letter to Castro in early January pleading for an independent medical examination, specifically regarding a mass on her husbands shoulder she fears is cancerous.
President Castro, please, cant we just resolve questions about my husbands health once and for all, she wrote. (Alan) has been in prison far too long. You have the authority and power to end this stalemate.
Judith Gross could not be reached for comment, and the organization representing her, Perseus Strategies, refused comment.
The case has further strained American relations with Cuba, which have been rocky since a U.S.-initiated embargo against the country in the early 1960s. Many Cuban-Americans still oppose an easing of tensions with the island nation, though President Obama has made it easier for Americans to visit the country.
Marylands two senators, Barbara Mikulski and Ben Cardin, have also been vocal in their calls for Gross release.
Cardin sponsored a resolution demanding Gross unconditional release, which the Senate passed unanimously in early December.
Several American politicians and members of Congress have visited Cuba over the last few years in the hope of securing his release, though none have been successful.
Its outrageous that a fellow American would be sitting in a prison like that, Halber said, calling the case against Gross indefensible. The time has come, very simply, to bring him home.
RELATED INFORMATION:
What Did Alan Gross Do in Cuba? Reports Show Accused Spy Knew the Risks He Was Taking
The Jewish Daily Forward, February 15, 2012
http://forward.com/articles/151432/what-did-alan-gross-do-in-cuba/
Alan Phillip Gross on WikiPedia
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alan_Phillip_Gross