Calgary Herald

Cuban Pan Am Games rowers abandon team to defect to U. S.

- BILL POTRECZ — With files from Bernie Puchalski and Grant LaFleche

The U. S. has extended a diplomatic olive branch to Cuba, but its door remains open to defectors from the island nation.

Four Cuban rowers defected from the Pan Am Games with the help of Cubans already in the United States, coach Juan Carlos Reyes said Wednesday.

Leosmel Ramos, Wilber Turro, Manuel Suarez and Orlando Sotolongo “abandoned” the team, said Reyes, who has coached rowing in Cuba for 24 years.

“There are ( American) laws that benefit Cubans and they are actually encouraged to do that type of thing,” Reyes said. “In that sense, we are special. We are the only country that is allowed to do that.”

The rowing team received news the four defectors are in the U. S. and expects they will seek asylum there, the coach said through translator Elizabeth Martinez.

He said the athletes got help from Cubans in the U. S. He said Canadians are not thought to be involved.

“Despite the fact that Cuban and U. S. relationsh­ips are improving, the laws still remain. The U. S. laws still benefit Cubans and these are some of the consequenc­es we may see. We have never seen any rowers doing this, but we have seen baseball players who have done this.”

Reyes said the defections were particular­ly hard for the other rowers to deal with.

“From a human perspectiv­e, every human has innate values and we need to help out our teammates and we shouldn’t be drawn to engage in stuff like this because of money,” he said. “We need to naturally help our teammates and this is something that obviously does not sit well with us.”

Janet Dench, spokespers­on for the Canadian Council for Refugees, said it is easier for Cubans to seek asylum in the U. S. than it is for refugees from other countries because of American legislatio­n directed at Cuba dating back to 1966.

Neither the Canadian nor American immigratio­n or border authoritie­s would comment on the Cuban rowers, citing privacy regulation­s.

Reyes said Ramos and Turro dropped out before the regatta began Saturday. The defections of Sotolongo and Suarez caused Cuba to drop out of the lightweigh­t men’s four Wednesday.

 ?? ALFREDO ESTRELLA/ AFP/ GETTY IMAGES FILES ?? Cuban rowers Leosmel Ramos, left, Manuel Suarez and Wilber Turro, are three of four defectors.
ALFREDO ESTRELLA/ AFP/ GETTY IMAGES FILES Cuban rowers Leosmel Ramos, left, Manuel Suarez and Wilber Turro, are three of four defectors.

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