Trump administration indicts Cuba's Raul Castro over 1996 plane shootdown
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Trump administration indicts Cuba's Raul Castro over 1996 plane shootdown
US federal prosecutors indicted Cuba’s former President Raul Castro for the 1996 downing of civilian aircraft operated by the Miami-based exile group Brothers to the Rescue. The indictment was unsealed and alleges that Castro, then Cuba’s defense minister, played a leading role in the decision to have Cuban fighter jets shoot down two civilian planes on February 24, 1996. The charges include conspiracy to kill US nationals, murder, and destroying an aircraft. Four people were killed, prompting international condemnation and worsening US-Cuba strains. Brothers to the Rescue began operating in 1991 to help Cuban refugees by locating rafters at sea and alerting the US Coast Guard. US and international investigators said the attack occurred over international waters, while Cuba said the aircraft violated or approached Cuban airspace.
"United States federal prosecutors have indicted Cuba's former President Raul Castro in connection with the 1996 downing of planes operated by the Miami-based exile group Brothers to the Rescue. The indictment, unsealed on Wednesday, marks one of the sharpest escalations in tensions between Washington and Havana in years. The US Justice Department alleges that Castro, Cuba's defence minister at the time, played a leading role in the decision to have Cuban fighter jets to shoot down two civilian aircraft on February 24, 1996."
"It has charged Castro with one count of conspiracy to kill US nationals, four counts of murder and two counts of destroying an aircraft. Four people were killed in the 1996 attack, which triggered international condemnation and deepened the strains between the US and Cuba. Brothers to the Rescue began operating in 1991 during a wave of Cuban migration to the United States."
"Founded by Cuban exile Jose Basulto, the group aimed to help Cuban refugees crossing the Florida Straits by locating rafters at sea and alerting the US Coast Guard. US officials and international investigators said the planes were attacked over international waters, while Cuba maintained the aircraft had violated or approached Cuban airspace. Then-President Fidel Castro later denied that he or Raul Castro gave a direct order to shoot down the planes."
"Orlando Perez, a political science professor at the University of North Texas at Dallas, told Al Jazeera that the timing of the indictment appears linked to a broader US pressure campaign against Havana. I think it's important to look at the sequence of recent events, Perez said. He pointed to a visit last week from the director of the US Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), John Ratcliffe, to Havana. That meeting came as part of ongoing negotiations between the island's communist government and the administratio"
Read at www.aljazeera.com
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