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4.24.00 4.20.00 4.18.00 4.12.00 4.10.00 4.07.00 4.06.00 3.31.00 3.29.00 3.24.00 3.17.00
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| 4/24/00
4:00 p.m. A Loving Father? Not if he allows stuff like this. Kate O'Beirne is NR's Washington editor. |
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Despite their determination to defend Elian's rights, which the appellate court found were violated by the INS, their intransigence is being blamed for Saturday's pre-dawn raid. But it is Elian's father who is responsible for the terror his son endured, and the fusillade of bullets he risked. When the heavily armed agents burst into the little house in Little Havana they met no resistance, the family having pledged not to resist if the INS insisted on taking Elian by force. His cousin, Marisleysis Gonzalez, only begged that Elian not see the guns so threateningly wielded. In sharp contrast, Elian's father refused countless offers to be reunited with his son peacefully, if not permanently. It was Juan Miguel Gonzalez, either freely or under Castro's orders, who made a non-negotiable demand that was irreconcilable with Elian's legal rights. Once the INS agreed to satisfy his demands, at all costs, his son was likely to be terrorized. A loving father, who claims to be free from Castro's control, would have been in Florida with his son months ago. Once he finally arrived, he would have walked across broken glass to see his son for an hour. A loving father would be haunted by the realization that his actions resulted in his terrorized son's cries of "Help me. Help me." Elian's Miami relatives are losing in the court of public opinion, but they have passed Solomon's test with flying colors. |
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