WASHINGTON - (AP) -- An American imprisoned in Cuba for more than
four years after illegally working to set up Internet access on the
island suspended his hunger strike Friday after more than a week.
Alan Gross, 64, had eaten his last
solid meal April 2 and said in a statement that he was fasting to
protest his treatment by the U.S. and Cuban governments. In a statement
released through his lawyer, Gross said he suspended his fast Friday
because his 91-year-old mother asked him to stop. Gross, who lived in
Maryland before his arrest, said he was suspending his "protest fast"
but "there will be further protests to come."
"There will be no cause for further
intense protest when both governments show more concern for human beings
and less malice and derision toward each other," the statement said.
Gross was arrested in Cuba in 2009
while working in the Communist-run country to set up Internet access,
which bypassed local restrictions and monitoring. At the time, Gross was
working as a subcontractor for the U.S. government's U.S. Agency for
International Development, which promotes democracy on the island. Cuba
considers USAID's programs illegal attempts by the U.S. to undermine its
government, and Gross was tried and sentenced to 15 years in prison.
Gross' hunger strike was in part
prompted by an Associated Press story published last week that revealed
that USAID secretly created a "Cuban Twitter" communications network to
stir unrest on the island. The social media network, called ZunZuneo,
was publicly launched shortly after Gross was arrested. It reached tens
of thousands of subscribers before being shut down in 2012 when a
government grant ended.
Gross' lawyer, Scott Gilbert, had said
that learning about the ZunZuneo story was the "final straw" that
prompted Gross' hunger strike.
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