An international Commission of Inquiry called on US President Barack Obama at the weekend to free the remaining Miami Five.
On the second day of the inquiry, set up to look into the case of the five Cubans jailed by the US while investigating anti-Cuban terror groups based in Miami, the judges concluded that their trial and imprisonment was in potential breach of the human rights charter.
Reading out a preliminary sentence Justice Yogesh Sbharwal said pardoning the Five - three of whom remain in US prison - could mean a vital contribution towards "world justice and world peace."
While ordinary Americans were suffering in the wake of 2005’s deadly hurricane, the Bush administration was more concerned with maintaining its anti-Cuba stance than with saving lives, writes MANOLO DE LOS SANTOS
The recent speech by Cuba’s President Miguel Diaz-Canel is an affirmation of Amilcar Cabral’s revolutionary principle, writes ISAAC SANEY



