Cuba demanding of the U.S.A.
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HAVANA (AFP) - Cuba’s government demanded Wednesday that the U.S. return Guantanamo Bay to the island and denounced the “war on terror” prison, where six detainees could face the death penalty.
Foreign Minister Felipe Perez Roque charged Wednesday that terror suspects being held at the U.S. naval base in the southeastern tip of Cuba have been subjected to torture and face unfair legal treatment.
Cuba rejects “the violation of human rights, unjust incarceration of prisoners held there without charges, and their appearance in courts without guarantees and in which they are convicted in advance,” he told reporters, without directly referring to the case of six detainees facing charges that carry the death penalty.
“We demand again the closure of the indecent Guantanamo prison, the return of the territory illegally occupied to our fatherland,” Perez Roque said.
The U.S., which has occupied Guantanamo for more than 100 years, signed in 1934 a lease agreement with the Cuban government that could not be altered without agreement by both countries.
Since 1960, a year after it came to power, Fidel Castro’s communist government has refused the annual lease payment of $5,000 from the U.S.
The U.S. Defense Department announced Monday that military prosecutors are seeking the death penalty against six al-Qaida detainees on murder and conspiracy charges in the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks on the U.S.

