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The global power of freemasonry - Gnostic Liberation Front

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moved to Hong Kong for reasons <strong>of</strong> safety. In 1962, the Chinese<br />

Ministry <strong>of</strong> the Interior expressed a wish that the lodges register in<br />

the same way as other organizations. <strong>The</strong> freemasons were unwilling<br />

to publicise lists <strong>of</strong> their members, and thus preferred to move to<br />

either Hong Kong or Taiwan. According to masonic sources, the<br />

members were not persecuted in communist China. This was probably<br />

due to the fact that freemasons were active in the very highest ranks<br />

<strong>of</strong> the government (as advisers among other things).<br />

Fidel Castro Ruz was born in 1926, the son <strong>of</strong> a rich landowner in<br />

the vicinity <strong>of</strong> Santiago de Cuba. <strong>The</strong> parents <strong>of</strong> his mother Lina Ruz,<br />

who was Jewish, emigrated from Turkey. Fidel Castro's father Angel<br />

Castro became a millionaire working for Rockefeller's United Fruit<br />

Company. While a student at the University <strong>of</strong> Havana Castro was<br />

also a notorious hooligan (Paul Johnson, "Modern Times", New York,<br />

1983). Fidel joined UIR, an anti-fascist and anti-catholic organi-<br />

zation. He also associated himself with communists. His friends were<br />

all communists. At that time Castro became a KGB agent.<br />

While at the university, together with Ortiz he killed Manolo<br />

Castro-Campos on 22 February 1948. He was also involved in the<br />

killing <strong>of</strong> a police <strong>of</strong>ficer Fernandez and in the murder case <strong>of</strong> Lionel<br />

Gomez.<br />

Castro was involved in the Confetti Key invasion <strong>of</strong> the Dominican<br />

Republic on 20 September 1947, a rebellion staged by a terrorist<br />

student group. He was armed with a sub-machine gun (Hugh Thomas,<br />

"Cuba: Or Pursuit <strong>of</strong> Freedom", 1998, pp. 814-916).<br />

<strong>The</strong> journalist Gerardo Reyes wrote in his article "Scotland Yard<br />

Investigated Castro for Assassination" (El Nuevo Herald, 10 April<br />

2001), that Fidel Castro was considered one <strong>of</strong> the suspects in the<br />

murder <strong>of</strong> the Liberal Colombian leader Jorge Eliecer Gaitin by<br />

Scotland Yard detectives, who investigated the case in July 1948,<br />

according to American investigator Paul Wolf.<br />

Castro made an appointment with presidential candidate Gaitan.<br />

On 9 April 1947, at 11 a. m., Castro and his associate Del Pino met<br />

in the Cafeteria Colombia in Bogota with Gaitan's assassin, the 22<br />

321

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