Ex-agent: Escobar met Cuban officials in '89
A former Cuban intelligence officer said a Colombian drug kingpin was in
Cuba in 1989 to meet with military officials.
Posted on Wed, Mar. 12, 2008
BY WILFREDO CANCIO ISLA
El Nuevo Herald
Colombian drug kingpin Pablo Escobar was in Cuba in 1989 to meet with 
Cuban military officials, according to a former intelligence officer who 
escaped the island with his family to the United States.
''Pablo Escobar was at my family's home in Havana on Feb. 22, 1989, and 
he took flowers to my mother as a gift because that day she was 
celebrating her birthday,'' said Daniel Abierno Govín, a former first 
lieutenant for Cuba's Interior Ministry, known as MININT.
Abierno, 50, told El Nuevo Herald that the meeting with the head of the 
Medellín cartel took place at his parents' home in the El Vedado 
neighborhood of Havana.
SAW HIM ONCE
''I saw him only once there and I can't say if he was in Cuba on other 
occasions, but I can assure you that he was at my house that day,'' 
stressed Abierno, who worked for MININT for 20 years.
``They presented him as a friend of my sister, Rosa María, and later I 
learned who he was.''
Abierno's sister, Rosa María Abierno Govín, was a captain in the Cuban 
intelligence agency and the only woman included in the 1989 case against 
Gen. Arnaldo Ochoa and other high-ranking Cuban officials. She received 
a 30-year sentence, charged with bringing cocaine to the island through 
computer shipments.
She was released in 1994 and died of cancer barely three months later.
''In Cuba those who had contact with Escobar are either in prison or 
dead,'' Abierno said. ``No one who had a relationship with him [Escobar] 
can easily leave from there.''
MISSILES BUY
Escobar's visit -- he was killed by security forces in Medellín in 
December 1993 -- took place to negotiate directly with Ochoa to buy 
land-to-air missiles. But the deal fell through after Ochoa and his 
collaborators were detained and tried in June 1989.
Ochoa made the first contacts with Colombian narcotraffickers between 
October and November of 1986. He was helped by Capt. Jorge Martínez, who 
was able to meet with a representative of the Medellín cartel, according 
to details in the Cuba trial against Ochoa.
In May 1988, Martínez traveled to Colombia with a false passport to meet 
with Escobar under strict security. Both agreed that the price for 
shipping the drug to the United States through Cuba would be $1,200 per 
kilo of cocaine.
Ochoa and Martínez were killed by firing squad, along with Col. Antonio 
de la Guardia and Maj. Amado Padrón.
Abierno told El Nuevo Herald that the case that involved his sister 
resulted ''in a hard blow for the rest of my life'' and marked the 
beginning of his dislike for Fidel Castro's regime.
During the trial, his father, Bienvenido Abierno Rodríguez, died of a 
thrombosis at age 72, and then his mother, Eugenia Govín Pérez, died at 
age 63 from a diabetic crisis.
''My parents couldn't bear my sister's trial,'' he said. ``And Rosa 
María's death left a lot of suspicion, because her health was ironclad.''
TV PROGRAM
On Tuesday, Abierno appeared on the program A Mano Limpia on Channel 
41-AmericaTeVe, where he recounted his memories. The ex-official escaped 
Cuba in a boat with his family on August 13, 2005, and was caught at 
sea. He remained at the Guantánamo base for seven months, where he said 
he was interviewed by various CIA officials. In March 2006, he was sent 
to live in Kentucky.
At the end of last year, he moved to South Florida, where he now lives.
http://www.miamiherald.com/news/miami_dade/story/453206.html
 
 
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