Paris, Apr 28 (Prensa Latina) The Cuba Coopération France (CubaCoop) association highlighted that its solidarity campaign to support vulnerable people in the island reached 63,000 euros, and confirmed the shipment of a first container of powdered milk.
In a press release, the organization with almost 30 years of economic and social cooperation with Cuba specified that its immediate objective is to reach 76,000 euros collected, in order to send a second load of powdered milk, aimed at alleviating the impact of the U.S. blockade on the population, particularly children and the elderly.
We must keep up this effort, it stressed in a message that includes thanks to the people and entities that have made their contribution.
CubaCoop launched the initiative in March, inviting citizens, local authorities, public and private enterprises, foundations, trade unions, political forces and solidarity associations in France to participate in it.
For more than six decades Cuba has suffered the economic, commercial and financial blockade of the United States, a hostile policy with a severe impact on all sectors of society.
According to the association, its modest campaign to contribute to the feeding of children, women and the elderly will see its first result in May, when a container with 10 tons of powdered milk will be sent, which will arrive in Cuba in mid-June.
The Cuban Ambassador to France, Otto Vaillant, reiterated his gratitude for the solidarity initiative and took the opportunity to ratify the condemnation of the U.S. blockade, which he denounced for its extraterritorial nature, in open defiance of International Law and the United Nations Charter.
Havana, Apr 27 (Prensa Latina) The president of the National Assembly of People’s Power (parliament) of Cuba, Esteban Lazo, reiterated today the willingness to strengthen inter-parliamentary relations with South Africa, on the occasion of the commemoration of Independence Day of the African country.
On the social network X, Lazo, also president of the Council of State, sent congratulations to the South African people, Government, and Parliament on behalf of the island’s deputies and in his behalf.
The Cuban Foreign Ministry also sent in X congratulations to South Africa and ratified the will to continue strengthening the relations of friendship and brotherhood that unite both nations.
On April 27, 1994, South Africans voted in the first post-apartheid multiracial elections that gave victory to the African National Congress (ANC) which brought Nelson Mandela to power, the country’s first black president.
Colombo, Apr 24 (Prensa Latina) Cuban Ambassador Andrés González met here today with the Sri Lankan delegation that will participate in Cuban activities for International Workers’ Day in the island.
According to a publication from the Cuban mission in Colombo, after some years of absence, a representation of the South Asian country will be part of the international delegations to the island for May Day.
G. V. Tilakasiri, deputy general secretary of the Democratic Left Front, heads the Sri Lankan youth group, the diplomatic source said.
The delegation also included the presence of the first secretary Maribel Duarte.
González thanked them for their participation in such an important date in Cuba and wished them a happy stay in the Homeland of Martí, Fidel and Raúl, the embassy noted.
The Cuban diplomat pointed out that the presence of the Sri Lankan delegation in the largest of the Antilles will allow for closer ties between the two countries.
This year, the May 1st. parade on the Caribbean island will take place at the José Martí Anti-imperialist Tribune in Havana.
The usual Solidarity Meeting with foreign friends will also be held in Cuba, the Cuban Institute of Friendship with the Peoples recently confirmed.
Havana, Apr 25 (Prensa Latina) Cuban experts detailed the modus operandi of terrorists based in the United States, who use social networks to instigate crimes and commit acts of contempt for authorities.
The experts explained on national television how digital platforms are used to stimulate crowds to commit acts of subversion and other crimes, which are contemplated in the unconventional war manuals applied by the United States against Cuba.
The president of the Criminal Chamber of the Supreme People’s Court, Otto Molina Rodríguez, explained that the purpose of those who commit crimes must always be taken into account to evaluate the severity. He also commented that on social networks there are calls to alter public order, to attack the police and to depose public institutions. In the latter case, the crime can be considered sedition, punishable by up to 30 years of deprivation of liberty, or life imprisonment if the crime is committed in exceptional situations, disasters or if it affects the security of the State.
Colonel Hugo Morales Karell, second chief of the General Directorate of the National Revolutionary Police, explained that the United States urges attacks against the authorities so that they apply an excessive response for them to capitalize on that reaction and publishing it on social networks, thus showing a failed government and a false police brutality.
Morales Karell pointed out that all these actions are contained in the unconventional war plans, with which “the enemy seeks to generate a pretext that may allow them to continue accusing Cuba.”
The Colonel stated that the Cuban police have training in self-defense and techniques that permit them to subdue a person without having to resort to lethal means for control, and stressed that police officers learn in academies rationality when dealing with individuals as a principle that must be followed.
Santiago de Chile, Apr 27 (Prensa Latina) The city of Valdivia, in southern Chile, will host the XXVII National Meeting of Solidarity with Cuba, to which delegates from all over the country are summoned, its organizers informed today.
Marisol Molina, of the José Martí group in the Los Ríos region, told Prensa Latina that the event will take place on November 22 and 23 and will be an opportunity to strengthen the historic ties of brotherhood between the two peoples.
She recalled that the first medical brigade sent by the nascent Cuban Revolution was the one that arrived precisely in Valdivia in 1960 to support the victims of the biggest earthquake in the history of this country, which measured 9.5 degrees on the Richter scale and left some two thousand deaths.
Not only do we have to give thanks for that, but also for the help provided by Cuba to many Chileans during the 1973 coup d’état against the Popular Unity government, she said. For Molina, the meeting will strengthen the Solidarity Movement in southern Chile. It will also be an opportunity for visitors to enjoy the culture and beautiful landscapes of a region with many rivers, explained Angelica Smith, a great friend of Cuba.
Marisol Molina informed that they are currently immersed in the whole organization of the event, as agreed in the 26th edition, held in 2022 in the city of La Serena.
Havana, April 24 (Prensa Latina) Cuban and foreign intellectuals today recognized the humanist vocation of the Cabildo Quisicuaba Sociocultural Project, focused on social reintegration and community work.
During a visit to the headquarters of that association in the Los Sitios neighborhood, in the capital´s municipality of Centro Habana, the president of the cultural institution Casa de las Américas, Abel Prieto, highlighted the scope and work that Quisicuaba carries out in more than 30 social programs for vulnerable people, with emphasis on street dwellers.
Prieto enjoyed the pre-premiere of the work Comunidad, by the National Folklore Ensemble of Cuba, accompanied by the Casa de las Américas Prize Jury.
Likewise, the Minister of Culture Alpidio Alonso recognized the deeply cultural work that Quisicuaba does, distinguished in 2022 with the National Community Culture Award.
Alonso highlighted the unity, cohesion and integration of efforts to carry out the revolutionary process, despite the United States blockade against Cuba.
For his part, the Guatemalan writer Arturo Arias stated that this is the most exciting visit to the Cuban capital since his arrival, “because of the human energy, the dynamics and the fact of sharing with people.”
Havana, Apr 26 (Prensa Latina) The 14th edition of the International Construction Fair, Fecons 2024, ends in Cuba on Friday, in which more than 100 exhibiting companies participated, with Russia as a guest of honor.
Specialized tools and equipment, ceramic products, additives, motorcycles, PVC pipes, and electrical and hydro-sanitary materials were part of a broad range of products exhibited at the event to promote technical services and technological systems for construction.
Representatives of companies from 13 other countries attended the event, which combined exhibitions at Havana’s Pabexpo fairgrounds with an International Scientific and Technical Forum at the Conference Center in Havana.
Present at the opening session on April 23 was Commander of the Revolution and deputy Prime Minister Ramiro Valdés, Construction Minister René Mesa, and Russian Ambassador to Cuba, Víctor Koronelli, among other prominent figures.
The scientific forum brought together entrepreneurs and academics, who discussed issues, including optimizing the preparation and construction processes through technological innovation and models for managing production chains.
They also addressed different experiences in the digital transformation of the investment process, the application of nanotechnology in producing materials, and reducing the sector’s environmental impact.
Havana, Apr 25 (Prensa Latina) President Miguel Díaz-Canel on Thursday stressed on his X profile Cuba’s unwavering commitment to the integration and unity of Latin America and the Caribbean.
After participating in Venezuela in the 23rd Summit of the Bolivarian Alliance for the Peoples of Our America-People’s Trade Agreement (ALBA-TCP) on Wednesday, the president noted the principles of peace, unity, solidarity and cooperation promoted by this regional integration mechanism.
He described the initiative as the ‘Miracle Alliance that made seemingly impossible projects and feats real, benefiting millions in the social sphere.’
Diaz-Canel pointed out that this group of countries has proved how and how much can be done from the South, beyond from blockades and difficulties decreed by empires and mercilessly imposed by the current international order, which is profoundly unjust.
In its 22-item Final Declaration, the 23rd ALBA-TCP Summit reaffirmed the commitment to strengthen ALBA as a mechanism for unity, dialogue and political coordination, based on the principles of solidarity, social justice, cooperation and economic complementarity.
The Latin American and Caribbean leaders also expressed their commitment to the defense of national sovereignty without external interference, and rejected the postulates of the Monroe Doctrine which, after 200 years, continues to be used to justify destabilizing and interventionist actions in the region.
The 2030 ALBA Strategic Agenda, approved at the meeting, includes the creation of a development and cooperation agency to attract resources in the world; the study and approval of the plan to relaunch Petrocaribe in a new stage; the approval of the ALBA-Food plan; and the successful completion, signing and adoption of the Peoples’ Trade Agreement (TCP).
Participants repeated the call on the international community to impose an immediate ceasefire in the Gaza Strip and stop the genocide, war crimes and crimes against humanity against Palestine.
April 24 (Democracy Now!) We speak with Carlos Fernández de Cossío, Cuba’s deputy minister of foreign affairs, about high-level U.S.-Cuban migration talks held last week in Washington. He says U.S. policies that expedite permanent residency for Cubans in the United States play a major role in the movement of people between the two countries, but adds that the main driver of migration is the decadeslong U.S. embargo. “The economic conditions of the people of Cuba push them to migrate, and an important fact in provoking those conditions are U.S. deliberate policies of destroying the Cuban economy and make it unworkable.” Fernández de Cossío also discusses the 2024 election and policy overlap between the Trump and Biden administrations, Cuba’s position on the U.S.-backed Israeli war on Gaza, recent protests inside Cuba over living conditions and more.
AMY GOODMAN: This is Democracy Now!, democracynow.org, The War and Peace Report. I’m Amy Goodman, with Juan González.
High-level migration talks between the U.S. and Cuba were held in Washington last week. The twice annual meetings were suspended during the Trump presidency but resumed in 2022 by the Biden administration. The U.S. restarted deportation flights to Cuba last year after a two-year pause. Since then, the U.S. has been sending one flight with Cuban deportees to Havana each month.
Cuba has long blamed U.S. sanctions for strangling the Cuban economy and the 1966 Cuban Adjustment Act, which grants special entry rights to Cubans and support upon arrival, for encouraging its youth to emigrate.
We’re joined now in our New York studio, not far from the United Nations, by Cuba’s Deputy Foreign Minister Carlos Fernández de Cossío.
Welcome back to Democracy Now! It’s great to have you with us. If you can start off by talking about what happened in those talks last week?
CARLOS FERNÁNDEZ DE COSSÍO: Well, thank you for having me.
Last week, we had one of the regular sessions that we have as part of the implementation of the several agreements in migration that exist between Cuba and the United States. The aim of those agreements is to secure a safe, regular and orderly migration between the two countries. And they have several issues that have to be implemented for that. But there’s a given reality that is difficult to disconnect, which is the economic conditions of the people of Cuba push them to migrate, and an important fact in provoking those conditions are U.S. deliberate policies of destroying the Cuban economy and make it unworkable. Therefore, we insist and we put a lot of emphasis in saying that there continue to be a potential of Cuban migrants wanting to reach the borders of the United States as long as its policy continues to push people out of the country and as long as the United States has an inviting policy for Cubans, which enjoy privilege when they try to enter irregularly in the United States.
JUAN GONZÁLEZ: And, Foreign Minister, I wanted to ask you — the United Nations every year votes to oppose U.S. sanctions against Cuba. I think in the latest vote, only two nations in the entire General Assembly were opposed. That was Israel and the United States. Can you talk about the impact of this continued blockade and sanctions against your country?
CARLOS FERNÁNDEZ DE COSSÍO: The impact is overwhelming. The United States does not have — and no country has — a more comprehensive system of economic coercive measures against any country, nor has it been applied for as long as it has been applied against Cuba, which is over 63, 64 years ago. And if you just look at the asymmetry between the two countries, the size of the U.S. economy and the modest dimensions of the Cuban economy, you can try to understand the impact it has. It is a policy of economic warfare, trying to destroy not only the Cuban economy, but the system of social justice on which depends the well-being of the majority of Cubans.
JUAN GONZÁLEZ: And I wanted to ask you — in recent years, there’s been a greater migration of Cubans from the island to the United States than at any time in U.S. history, even more than in the aftermath of the Cuban Revolution in the 1960s. And also, the migration has shifted from going across the straits, the Florida Straits, into Central America and Mexico to the U.S. border. Could you talk about why that has happened during the — especially during the Trump and Biden years?
CARLOS FERNÁNDEZ DE COSSÍO: It’s a combination of factors. You have the fact that there are more Cubans living in the United States, and therefore there are more family connections, more friendly connections, so people find that it is a place where they will find families and groups that they know.
Secondly, the United States has a policy that privileges Cubans in a way that it does not privilege the citizens of any other country in the world. Therefore, Cubans believe that if they reach the border of the United States, by whichever means, they have very high possibility of entering.
Now, if you add to that that the U.S. has a standing policy of deliberately attacking the well-being, the standard and the living standards of the people of Cuba, attacking the economy, it is logical for there to be a push. Now, Cubans don’t see any possibility at the moment of a change in U.S. policy. Increasingly, they see that the United States plans to continue to punish their country. And therefore, a group of Cubans — not all Cubans, but a part of our citizens — leave the country. You have the half — half of Puerto Rico have left the island to come to the United States because of the economic conditions of that island, and yet that island does not suffer a policy of aggression as Cuba does from the goverment of the United States.
AMY GOODMAN: I want to ask you about the continued effects of the embargo against Cuba. And also, in November, the U.N. General Assembly called for the 31st time on the United States to end that decadeslong trade embargo against Cuba. Every country approved the nonbinding resolution except the United States and Israel — oh, and Ukraine abstained from the vote. Your response?
CARLOS FERNÁNDEZ DE COSSÍO: This is a resolution that’s been approved for the past 31 years or 32 years at the U.N., so it’s not new. The U.S. has been totally isolated. I believe that there is no other example of consistent isolation by a country in the U.N. as this one. The other would be Palestine, perhaps, is the only other subject in which there’s such level of isolation. It’s a moral message, because the U.N. does not have the capacity to lift U.S. coercive measures against Cuba.
But in addition to the resolution, over 34 heads of delegations at the General Assembly last year at the General Debate specifically requested the U.S. to take Cuba out of a very arbitrary list of the State Department that alleges that Cuba is a country that sponsors terrorism. No official in Washington — I’ve spoken with many — even takes the trouble of explaining to me why Cuba should be in that list. And the slander is not the main problem. The problem is that being in that list automatically triggers a set of additional coercive measures that makes Cuba have very serious problems to conduct our trade, our financing in any corner of the world, including countries that have a very friendly relationship with Cuba.
AMY GOODMAN: Like what? What are these issues that you have to deal with?
CARLOS FERNÁNDEZ DE COSSÍO: Banks will not give us loan. Banks will not participate in trade. So we’ve had companies with which we’ve traded for years to supply for our electrical infrastructure, for our healthcare, for transportation, that cannot trade with us anymore because the banks that they use are not ready — the banks that they use do not want to challenge the intimidating impact of U.S. policy against Cuba. And they say, “Look, we have nothing against you, but we don’t want to suffer the consequences in the United States.”
JUAN GONZÁLEZ: I wanted to ask you about Cuba’s view of what’s going on in the presidential race here in the United States. Clearly, under the Obama administration, there was an attempt to normalize relationships between Cuba and the U.S. But neither President Trump nor President Biden have done much to pursue the Obama policies. I’m wondering your sense of the stakes for Cuba in the terms of the presidential race in this country and who ends up winning.
CARLOS FERNÁNDEZ DE COSSÍO: I would say that the Trump and the Biden administration have done more. They’ve not only not done much, but they’ve done a lot to try to derail the progress between the two nations — and that was celebrated by the peoples of both countries — to improve our relationship and to work towards a respectful relationship. The impact for Cuba is tremendous.
Now, we’re not involved in U.S. elections. What we try or what we wish would happen, what we’re hoping for, is that whoever is elected in January will try to take a more reasonable approach toward Cuba, one that is fair, that will lead the government of the United States to do something that’s correct — that is correct, and allow the people of Cuba and the people of the United States to be able to engage with each other without restrictions. In the U.S., any link by Americans with Cuba is prohibited. You need a permission of the government to relate with Cuba, to travel to Cuba, to invest in Cuba. If you travel to Cuba, you need a permission of the government that will tell you where you can stay and where you cannot stay. To play golf, to play baseball, you need a permission from the U.S. government. We wish for there to be a policy that would allow Americans to freely engage with our country, as citizens of any country do or as Americans can do with any other country.
AMY GOODMAN: So, let me ask you: What’s happened? Because Obama began normalizing relations. Of course, President Obama’s vice president was Vice President Biden. So, is he going back on this? And number two, I’m wondering, as you listen to our broadcast — and you don’t need to just do that to see what’s happening in the streets of the United States around the protests around Gaza, 300 people just arrested in Brooklyn at a seder, especially Jewish activists who are concerned about the U.S. support of Israel, the Palestinians, Arab Americans, the massive youth concern about Gaza — what your perspective is and the perspective, overall, of the Global South on this issue.
CARLOS FERNÁNDEZ DE COSSÍO: So, two different questions. On the first, we expect the government of the United States, the Biden administration, not to faithfully follow the measures, the coercive measures, of reinforcement that were put by the Trump administration. And that is what has occurred. We were surprised. We didn’t think that there was going to be such loyalty by the Biden administration to the measures that were put in place by the Trump administration. That was surprising for us, and for — what I gather, surprising for many Americans.
Now, regarding Gaza, our positions are very strong. There have been also very massive — a lot of rallies in Cuba. The difference is that our president and our political leadership has been at the forefront of those rallies, joining them and being a participant with the rest of the people. We have a very strong and critical position against the massacre that is occurring in Palestine today. We see it as a brutal manifestation of what has been happening there for the past 75 years — the killings, the kidnappings, the displacements of the people of Palestine. This is just a very brutal manifestation of a very long history. And Israel can only do that because they have the financial, the military and the political support of the U.S.
JUAN GONZÁLEZ: Yeah, I wanted to ask you about some historical matters. Most people are not aware that Ernesto “Che” Guevara, one of the founders of July 26th Revolutionary Movement, visited Gaza in 1959. Do you know why did Che visit Gaza back then? And how did his visit spark global solidarity with the Palestinian struggle?
CARLOS FERNÁNDEZ DE COSSÍO: He visited in solidarity with the people of Palestine. At the time, we still had diplomatic relations with the government of Israel, but we believed that we owed to the people of Palestine our solidarity. You have to remember that in 1947, Cuba — and this is before the revolution — had a very strong position when the state of Israel was created about the dangers that this could have if it was not managed correctly by the U.N., when it took the decision. So it’s not surprising that in the early months of the Cuban Revolution, one of our main leaders, Che Guevara, visited Gaza.
JUAN GONZÁLEZ: And more recently, I wanted to ask you about the protests that erupted in March after some blackouts, electricity blackouts, in Cuba, in the second city of Cuba, Santiago. What has developed since then? And the Cuban government was suggesting that the United States was, somehow or other, stoking or supporting those protests.
CARLOS FERNÁNDEZ DE COSSÍO: The U.S. government invests millions of dollars every year to try to create an opposition in Cuba, to destabilize the country, to provoke people to act against the government. On March 17th, a group of people in Santiago, as you were saying, came out to the street to protest. They protested because there were blackouts. They protested because they were demanding food. But the food that they were demanding is not the food that’s in the stores, in private stores normally. They were demanding, and rightfully so, the food that is subsidized by the government — powdered milk, bread — electricity, which is also subsidized in Cuba, because they are accustomed to a system of social justice that our government provides and that the U.S. government is trying to destroy. We know as a fact that the U.S. invested in those protests to be larger, to be violent and to be in many cities. It was a failure for the U.S. government. People protested peacefully, and they have a right to do so.
AMY GOODMAN: On a separate issue, Deputy Foreign Minister of Cuba, I wanted to ask you about Cuba’s position on Mexico cutting diplomatic ties with Ecuador after Ecuador raided Mexico’s Embassy in Quito, where the Ecuadorian Vice President Jorge Glas had taken refuge for months. What’s Cuba’s position?
CARLOS FERNÁNDEZ DE COSSÍO: We respect Mexico’s decision. The violation of their embassy is something unprecedented. For some reason, the international community has always respected the immunity of foreign diplomatic missions, because, if not, there cannot be contact. There cannot be official contact between countries. And for some reason, the international community, regardless of the ideological trend, have always respected that. This was a brutal violation of the Vienna Convention, and it established a very dangerous precedent for every country. So we respect Mexico’s position.
JUAN GONZÁLEZ: And finally, I wanted to ask you about something that’s been in the media now for several years here in the United States, the so-called Havana syndrome of diplomats from the United States suddenly becoming sickened in Cuba. Could you talk about what you know about this?
CARLOS FERNÁNDEZ DE COSSÍO: The so-called Havana syndrome —
JUAN GONZÁLEZ: We have 30 seconds.
CARLOS FERNÁNDEZ DE COSSÍO: The so-called Havana syndrome is a fable. It was created to derail the relationship between Cuba and the United States. They needed an excuse. The big question is: Who invented this? The media has not gone far enough to say who invented it. How was this theory, that challenges science, challenges physics, challenges the academic community around the world — how was that invented? And how did the government of the United States decide to incorporate it in its agenda?
AMY GOODMAN: In fact, U.S. diplomats say that they’re getting sick around the world.
CARLOS FERNÁNDEZ DE COSSÍO: And we don’t question the symptoms that people might have. What we question is the explanation, that began by sonic, and then they’re saying that it’s a concussion, without a concussion having occurred. Scientists say that this does not test the threshold of any academic or scientific approach.
AMY GOODMAN: We want to thank you so much for being with us, Cuba’s Deputy Foreign Minister Carlos Fernández de Cossío. And for those of you who speak Spanish, you can go to democracynow.org’s Spanish website to see our interview in Spanish. I’m Amy Goodman, with Juan González, for another edition of Democracy Now!
Havana, Apr 25 (Prensa Latina) Members of the May Day and Ernesto Che Guevara International Solidarity Brigades are visiting the central province of Cienfuegos on Thursday and participating in productive work days in western Pinar del Río province.
During this day, members of the 17th May Day International Brigade of Volunteer Work and Solidarity with Cuba will visit productive, cultural, educational, and healthcare centers and the small-sized Specialized Design Enterprise (MIPYME) in Cienfuegos.
More than 40 members of the Ernesto Che Guevara Brigade will do volunteer work to clean and maintain the Ernesto Che Guevara Electronic Components Plan in Pinar del Río province, which manufactures solar panels, toner cartridges for printers, and a wide range of other products.
They will also visit the Pedro Junco Cultural Center and the headquarters of the Hermanos Saíz Association (AHS, in Spanish) to interact with the artistic and cultural artists of the province.
Convened by the Cuban Institute for Friendship with Peoples (ICAP), the two brigades bring together more than 280 friends from 24 nations.
Until May 7, both groups will participate in conferences on geopolitics, the challenges of the Cuban economy, the role of young people in society, cultural development, and will continue visiting productive, healthcare, cultural, and educational centers.