Global Support for Cuba Demonstrations

World leaders are expressing their support for the Cuban people after Sunday’s demonstrations across the island.

The foreign minister for the European Union, Josep Borrell, urged the Cuban government “to listen to these protests of discontent” during a press conference Monday in Brussels after meeting with EU foreign ministers.

Erika Guevara-Rosas, Americas director at Amnesty International, called Sunday’s protests “a historic day for Cuba” while expressing concern over reports of “internet blackouts, arbitrary arrests, excessive use of force — including police firing on demonstrators” as well as “a long list of missing persons.”

Guevara-Rosas called on Cuban President Miguel Diaz-Canel and his government to “address the social demands of its citizens, given the economic crisis, the shortages of food and medicine, the collapse of the health system — which is not responding to the current COVID-19 crisis — and the accumulation of historical demands for respect of the rights to freedom of expression and peaceful assembly.”

Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador told reporters in Mexico City Monday that a “truly humanitarian gesture” would be for the United States to lift the five-decade economic embargo of Cuba.

“No country in the world should be fenced in, blockaded,” he said.

In the United States, the mayor of Miami, Florida, called on the Biden administration to lead an international effort to help Cubans, who are suffering under the island’s long-serving communist government, he said.

“The government of Cuba is an illegitimate government,” Mayor Francis Suarez told reporters Monday. “And the people of Cuba are starving. They’re in need of medicine. They’re in need of international help. And frankly, unless the Cuban military or the Cuban police turns on the Cuban government, the Cuban people will continue to be repressed without any hope of freedom in the future.”

Miami is home to a large community of Cuban exiles who fled their homeland after Fidel Castro seized power in the 1959 revolution.

Another Florida political figure, Republican U.S. Senator Marco Rubio, praised the demonstrations, characterizing the events as “historic, peaceful and organic protests that arose throughout Havana and other provinces in Cuba” in a letter to President Joe Biden. Senator Rubio urged the president to take a number of steps to help the Cuban people, including identifying those involved in “acts of violent repression inside Cuba” and banning them from entering the United States.

Democratic U.S Senator Bob Menendez, the chairman of the chamber’s Foreign Relations Committee, called for the “violence and repression” against the Cuban people to end.

“The world’s eyes are on Cuba tonight and the dictatorship must understand we will not tolerate the use of brute force to silence the aspirations of the Cuban people,” he said in a statement issued late Sunday.

Some information for this report came from the Associated Press, Agence France-Press and Reuters.

Source: Voice of America

Cuban Protests: What We Know?

There was a heavy police presence in Cuba’s capital, Havana, on Monday, with the streets calm following Sunday’s anti-government protests.

President Miguel Díaz-Canel gave a nationally broadcast speech in which he blamed the unrest on “a policy of economic suppression” by the United States. He said the origins of problems cited by the protesters, including shortages of food, electricity and medicine, are all the result of the U.S. embargo on Cuba.

U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken rejected that position, saying “it would be a grievous mistake for the Cuban regime to interpret what is happening in dozens of towns and cities across the island as the result or product of anything the United States has done.”

U.S. President Joe Biden said those protesting “are demanding their freedom from an authoritarian regime.” He added that the United States “stands firmly with the people of Cuba as they assert their universal rights, and we call on the government of Cuba to refrain from violence in their attempt to silence the voices of the people of Cuba.”

Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro expressed his government’s support for Díaz-Canel on Monday and said, “If the U.S. really wants to help Cuba, let it immediately lift the sanctions and the blockade against its people.”

The protests were the largest anti-government demonstrations in Cuba in decades.

Source: Voice of America