Index

DATE=2/22/2000 TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT TITLE=CUBA SPY (L-ONLY) NUMBER=2-259459 BYLINE=GREG FLAKUS DATELINE=MEXICO CITY CONTENT= VOICED AT: INTRO: The government of President Fidel Castro in Cuba has accused the United States of maintaining a massive espionage operation in its Interests Section in Havana. As V-O-A's Greg Flakus reports from Mexico City, this comes on the heels of U-S charges against a Cuban diplomat. TEXT: In a statement issued by Cuba's ruling Communist party, the Castro government accuses the United States of operating a large spying operation out of its seven-story Interests Section building on the Havana waterfront. The Cuban statement alleges that the building is full of sophisticated listening devices and electronic spying equipment. It also says that most of the people working there are agents of the Central Intelligence Agency, or CIA, who the Castro government claims work closely with so-called "mercenaries." This is a reference to political dissidents and independent journalists within Cuba. There are so many spies in the U-S Interests section, according to the communique, that if Cuba asked them all to leave--in the words of the statement-- "there would be few or none left." As for the U-S allegations against the Cuban diplomat, the statement challenges the United States to present the charges in court. The Cuban government denies ever having used its Interests section in Washington for espionage. The accusations against the Cuban diplomat came as the result of an investigation of an official of the U-S Immigration and Naturalization Service in Miami by the Federal Bureau of Investigation, or FBI. U-S attorneys say the official, Mariano Faget, provided information on Cuban immigrants to the diplomat in Washington. The diplomat has been identified in press reports as Jose Imperatori, Second Secretary for Consular Affairs at the Cuban Interests Section. He was seen last month in the company of the two grandmothers of Elian Gonzalez when they went to Miami to meet with the boy. The Castro government claims the U-S allegations against Mr. Imperatori are designed to undermine the case for returning the boy to his father in Cuba. The statement issued Tuesday notes the timing of the accusation, coming just before the federal hearing in Miami on the case. Elian Gonzalez has been living with distant relatives in Miami ever since he was found on a makeshift raft off the Florida coast on November 25. His mother died in the attempt to reach U-S soil and the Miami exile community wants him to be granted asylum. The Cuban government, however, cites international law in demanding that the father's rights be upheld. (Signed) NEB/GF/TVM/gm/latam 22-Feb-2000 17:44 PM EDT (22-Feb-2000 2244 UTC) NNNN Source: Voice of America .