El caso de Sotomayorpor Azucarero Amigos, A Fidel no le basta con Elián. Que Sotomayor se buscara un pase de perico en Winnipeg durante los Panamericanos es tambien otra saga del "caballo". No! , no acepta que fue una mala decisión o una espupidez del gran atleta cubano. Fidel insiste con la locura de que nosotros, la "mafia cubana" interferimos con el analisis de los laboratorios canadienses que dieron el resultado de "cocaina" en la urina del atleta. Recuerden, los atletas cubanos aportan una gran cantidad de plata al erario fidelista, todo esto es solamente una jugada de dolares. Cuantas barbaridades mas tendremos que sufrir, lo que pasa es que la dictadura tiene siempre mucho dinero para gastar (la cuenta de Fidel) en abogados, aviones, testigos, etc., para continuar su guerra de lo imposible contra los "Yankees" (Gringos) y los contra los cubanos libres para asi proteger sus enormes intereses financieros. Tambien siempre que Fidel emprende una campan~a inmoral y loca como esta, es bien financiada y respaldada por las lides de sus simpatizantes de la izquierda en el exterior. Cuando el mundo dejara de ser ciego? Saludos, Azucarero Sotomayor Drug Case Put Off for Now
Filed at 11:43 a.m. EDT. April 9, 2000
By The Associated Press MONTE CARLO, Monaco (AP) -- The arbitration panel set to rule on Javier Sotomayor's drug case has adjourned until June 2. The world high jump record-holder from Cuba is appealing an International Amateur Athletic Federation suspension imposed after he tested positive for cocaine at last summer's Pan American Games in Winnipeg. The three-man arbitration panel, which began its hearing Friday, had been due to announce its verdict Sunday. ``The panel decided that it needed to gather more information from two witnesses,'' IAAF spokesman Giorgio Reineri said. ``The decision was in order to clarify everything. The panel did not want to leave any cloud or doubt to anyone. They are aware of the political implications and wanted to have no doubt.'' Reineri said that the two witnesses were a member of Montreal's anti-drug laboratory and a medical representative from the Cuban track federation. Both were questioned by the panel Friday, then returned home Saturday. Sotomayor was stripped of his gold medal at the Pan Am Games but has maintained his innocence. Cuban President Fidel Castro and the country's track federation, which cleared Sotomayor, claim that the urine samples were deliberately manipulated. If the appeal is rejected, Sotomayor faces a two-year suspension, which would rule him out of the Sydney Olympics. The 1992 Olympic champion is barred from competing until the June hearing, Reineri said.
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