By Michael Fox. Wednesday Jul 20th, 2011 2:38 PM. On July 20, a caravan of over 100 people crossed the U.S.-Mexican border, carrying 100 tons of humanitarian aid on its way to Cuba. This is the 22nd aid caravan to Cuba organized by the inter-faith organization, Pastors for Peace, which brings humanitarian aid to Cuba each year in defiance of the U.S. economic embargo and travel ban.">By Michael Fox. Wednesday Jul 20th, 2011 2:38 PM. On July 20, a caravan of over 100 people crossed the U.S.-Mexican border, carrying 100 tons of humanitarian aid on its way to Cuba. This is the 22nd aid caravan to Cuba organized by the inter-faith organization, Pastors for Peace, which brings humanitarian aid to Cuba each year in defiance of the U.S. economic embargo and travel ban.">

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  • Submitted by: manso
  • 07 / 21 / 2011


By Michael Fox. Wednesday Jul 20th, 2011 2:38 PM. On July 20, a caravan of over 100 people crossed the U.S.-Mexican border, carrying 100 tons of humanitarian aid on its way to Cuba. This is the 22nd aid caravan to Cuba organized by the inter-faith organization, Pastors for Peace, which brings humanitarian aid to Cuba each year in defiance of the U.S. economic embargo and travel ban.

“We insist on our right to travel to Cuba, and insist on our right to reach out to our brothers and sisters in Cuba,” Ellen Bernstein, acting co-director of IFCO/Pastors for Peace, told NACLA in a phone interview the day before the crossing (below). “We think it’s so unfair that our brothers and sisters in Cuba should be suffering for a blockade that no one can defend and which just doesn’t make any sense.”

Although members of the caravan crossed the border successfully, U.S. Customs and Border Patrol officers seized seven computers that according to organizers “were to be donated to Cuban hospitals, schools, and a veterinary clinic .Three of the computers seized were the same ones that were taken from last year’s caravan in 2010, and were later returned to IFCO/Pastors for Peace.”

This is not the first time that aid has been confiscated from the Caravan. In 1993 a yellow school bus bound for Cuba was detained by U.S. Customs, and then released after a 23-day 13-person hunger strike. In 1996, five people fasted for 93 days for the release of hundreds of computers.

The Caravan now heads on through Mexico on its way to Cuba.

Source: www.indybay.org/newsitems/2011/07/20/18685449.php


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