U.S.
helped imprisoned Cuban spy artificially inseminate wife
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[December 23, 2014]
By Daniel Trotta
HAVANA (Reuters) - The United States
helped a Cuban spy imprisoned in California artificially inseminate his
wife back in Cuba, a goodwill gesture while Washington and Havana were
engaged in secret talks on restoring diplomatic ties, U.S. officials
said on Monday.
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Now Gerardo Hernandez and his wife, Adriana Perez, are expecting
his baby in two weeks, even though he was locked up for 16 years
without conjugal visits. It will be a girl called Gema, Cuban
official media said.
Hernandez was serving a double-life sentence at the U.S. federal
penitentiary in Victorville until his release on Wednesday as part
of a prisoner swap, which was completed the same day the United
States and Cuba announced they would restore diplomatic ties after
more than 50 years.
The United States freed Hernandez and two other Cuban agents in
exchange for U.S. foreign aid worker Alan Gross, a Cuban who had
been spying for Washington, and 53 unidentified prisoners.
"We can confirm the United States facilitated Mrs. Hernandez's
request to have a baby with her husband. The request was passed
along by Senator (Patrick) Leahy, who was seeking to improve the
conditions for Mr. Gross while he was imprisoned in Cuba," the U.S.
Justice Department said in a statement.
Leahy, a Democrat from Vermont, had long been active in attempting
to free Gross, who was arrested in 2009 for bringing banned
telecommunications technology into Cuba for the U.S. Agency for
International Development.
Hernandez, 49, was one of five Cuban agents captured 16 years ago
and given long prison terms, all of them hailed as "antiterrorist
heroes" in Cuba for infiltrating Cuban exile groups at a time when
anti-Castro extremists were bombing Cuban hotels.
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When the so-called Cuban Five were honored in a ceremony at Cuba's
National Assembly on Saturday, Perez appeared alongside Hernandez
with an obvious baby bump, raising questions about how she became
pregnant. Hernandez patted her belly and smiled, a signal of harmony
within the marriage.
Later that day, Hernandez told Cuban television she became pregnant
through "remote control" but gave no details.
CNN first reported on Sunday it was done by artificial insemination.
The New York Times on Monday reported that Cuban officials collected
the sperm sample and transported it through Panama.
Perez, 44, became pregnant on the second such attempt, the Times
said.
(Reporting by Daniel Trotta in Havana and Lesley Wroughton in
Washington; Editing by Lisa Shumaker)
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