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* Government response to the [[COVID-19 pandemic in Cuba|COVID-19 pandemic]]<ref name="CBS"/> and curbs on [[civil liberties]]<ref name="lift restrictions"/>
* Government response to the [[COVID-19 pandemic in Cuba|COVID-19 pandemic]]<ref name="CBS"/> and curbs on [[civil liberties]]<ref name="lift restrictions"/>
* [[United States embargo against Cuba]]<ref>{{cite news|last=Forde|first=Kaelyn|date=16 July 2021|url=https://www.aljazeera.com/economy/2021/7/16/cuba-protests-the-economic-woes-helping-drive-discontent|title=Cuba protests: The economic woes driving discontent|agency=Al Jazeera|accessdate=18 July 2021|quote=Cubans have taken to the streets in cities across the country over the last week, in a wave of rare public protests to express their frustration with rising prices, falling wages, the United States embargo and the failings of the island's long-standing communist government to address its economic challenges.}}</ref> and the latter's lack of promised economic reforms<ref name="NBC News"/>
* [[United States embargo against Cuba]]<ref>{{cite news|last=Forde|first=Kaelyn|date=16 July 2021|url=https://www.aljazeera.com/economy/2021/7/16/cuba-protests-the-economic-woes-helping-drive-discontent|title=Cuba protests: The economic woes driving discontent|agency=Al Jazeera|accessdate=18 July 2021|quote=Cubans have taken to the streets in cities across the country over the last week, in a wave of rare public protests to express their frustration with rising prices, falling wages, the United States embargo and the failings of the island's long-standing communist government to address its economic challenges.}}</ref> and the latter's lack of promised economic reforms<ref name="NBC News"/>
* [[Authoritarianism]]<ref>{{Cite web|last=Kirby|first=Jen|date=2021-07-15|title=Artists laid the foundation for Cuba’s protests. An economy in free fall and the pandemic ignited it.|url=https://www.vox.com/22577220/cuba-protests-economy-pandemic-sanctions|access-date=2021-07-18|website=Vox|language=en}}</ref><ref name="elpais.com.uy">{{cite news|url=https://www.elpais.com.uy/mundo/revuelta-cuba-situacion-inevitable.html|title=Análisis de la revuelta en Cuba: una situación inevitable|first=Luis|last=Fleischman|newspaper=[[El País (Uruguay)|El País]]|date=16 July 2021|language=es}}</ref> and reduced [[civil liberties]]<ref name="lift restrictions"/><ref name="elpais.com.uy"/>
|methods = [[Protest march]]es,<ref name="CBS"/><ref name=Marsh/> [[looting]] of State-owned shops,<ref name="NYT looting"/><ref name="BBC looting"/> [[rioting]]<ref name="News.com.au">{{cite web|date=12 July 2021|title=Cuba erupts in protests against authoritarian government|url=https://www.news.com.au/world/cuba-erupts-in-protests-against-government-sparking-war-of-words-with-usa/news-story/7fccf28e06388ade7efcef6cb93a5d30|accessdate=16 July 2021|website=News.com.au|archivedate=13 July 2021|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20210713210843/https://www.news.com.au/world/cuba-erupts-in-protests-against-government-sparking-war-of-words-with-usa/news-story/7fccf28e06388ade7efcef6cb93a5d30|url-status=live}}</ref>
|methods = [[Protest march]]es,<ref name="CBS"/><ref name=Marsh/> [[looting]] of State-owned shops,<ref name="NYT looting"/><ref name="BBC looting"/> [[rioting]]<ref name="News.com.au">{{cite web|date=12 July 2021|title=Cuba erupts in protests against authoritarian government|url=https://www.news.com.au/world/cuba-erupts-in-protests-against-government-sparking-war-of-words-with-usa/news-story/7fccf28e06388ade7efcef6cb93a5d30|accessdate=16 July 2021|website=News.com.au|archivedate=13 July 2021|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20210713210843/https://www.news.com.au/world/cuba-erupts-in-protests-against-government-sparking-war-of-words-with-usa/news-story/7fccf28e06388ade7efcef6cb93a5d30|url-status=live}}</ref>
|concessions =
|concessions =

Revision as of 21:34, 18 July 2021

2021 Cuban protests
Part of the Cuban dissident movement and protests over responses to the COVID-19 pandemic
People in Havana on 11 July
Date11 July 2021 – present
Location
Cuba and localized support rallies around the world, especially in Florida, United States
Caused by
Goals
MethodsProtest marches,[1][10] looting of State-owned shops,[11][12] rioting[13]
Concessions
  • Government temporarily lifts limit on food and medicine that can be imported without duties[2][14]
Parties
Lead figures

No centralized leadership

Miguel Díaz-Canel (First Secretary and President)
Salvador Valdés Mesa (Vice President)
Manuel Marrero Cruz (Prime Minister)
Esteban Lazo Hernández (Assembly President)
Álvaro López Miera (Defense Minister)
Raúl Castro
(former First Secretary)

Casualties and losses

1 protester dead[23]
(5 according to Cuba Decide)[24]

Around 400 arrests (according to Human Rights Watch)[25]
Some police officers injured[26]

A series of protests against the Cuban government and the ruling Communist Party of Cuba began on 11 July 2021, triggered by the shortage of food and medicine and the government's response to the resurgent COVID-19 pandemic in Cuba.[20][21][27] The protests have been described as the largest anti-government demonstrations since the Maleconazo in 1994.[8][28][29] As of 14 July, one person has been confirmed dead during a clash between protesters and police,[23] while the non-governmental organization Cuba Decide estimates five deaths.[24]

Background

While the structure of Cuban society and its political system did not fundamentally change, the 2010s saw the Cuban Thaw and the 2019 Cuban constitutional referendum. Some observers noted that even though Cuba's political system remained largely the same, civil liberties had recently increased, even if not enough. The 2019 constitutional referendum recognized both private property and foreign direct investment, among other things, such as removing obstacles to same-sex marriage and banning discrimination based on gender, race, ethnic origin, sexual orientation, gender identity, or disability, the introduction of habeas corpus and restoration of a presumption of innocence in the justice system which was last provided for in the 1940 Constitution of Cuba, and other political reforms, such as presidential term and age limits, as checks on government power.[30] In 2020, the economic situation in Cuba worsened. The Cuban economy contracted by 10.9% in 2020, and by 2% in the first six months of 2021.[31] The economic crises emerged from a combination of factors, including reduced financial support (subsidized fuel) from Cuba's ally Venezuela, the United States embargo and sanctions against Cuba, and the effect of the COVID-19 pandemic, which hit the country's tourism industry and led to a decrease in remittances from Cubans abroad.[9][19][32][29][31][33]

The economic situation has been exacerbated by inefficiencies and sanctions.[19][29] Although the embargo does not currently fully explicitly block the acquisition of food and medicines,[34] studies by the American Association for World Health and The Lancet showed that while the Cuban Democracy Act was amended to allow the de jure export of food and medicines into the country, the de facto application and implications of the act's enforcement significantly restricted the accessibility of both within Cuba.[35][36] According to the United Nations, which opposes the embargo, the health and nutrition of Cubans are negatively affected by the embargo; a condemnation of the embargo received the support of the United Nations General Assembly since 1992, with only Israel and the United States rejecting it.[37] In 2019, the Trump administration tightened the trade embargo. According to Pavel Vidal, a former Cuban central bank economist who teaches at Javeriana University in Colombia, reforms in Cuba "do not depend on the embargo, and the embargo should be eliminated unilaterally, independently from reforms in Cuba. Both cause problems."[4] Deteriorating economic conditions led to reductions in Cubans' standard of living, shortages of food and other basic products,[9][38] a shortage in hard currency,[38] and persistent power outages.[32] Promised economic reforms, which according to some analysts such as Carmen Sesin were needed and are another cause of discontent alongside the embargo, did not materialize, in part because of the fallout from the COVID-19 pandemic, according to the Cuban government.[4]

The government refused to receive COVID-19 vaccines from the COVAX initiative or buy foreign ones, opting to develop its own one instead, the Soberana 02.[34] Critics abroad described the process as delayed, and vaccine rollout as slow, and said it angered some Cubans and prompted their calls for more vaccines.[29][38] At the time the protests had broken out, about 15% of the Cuban population was fully vaccinated,[32] and the country had administered 64.3 doses per 100 people, the 6th highest rate in Latin America.[39] In 2021, COVID-19 cases began to surge especially in the Matanzas Province, and the situation was further aggravated by the shortage of medicines and food.[40] Cuba responded by deploying more doctors to the province.[29] The protests were also fuelled by dissatisfaction with the government,[31][38] with The Washington Post's Anthony Faiola describing it as a police state.[41] Curbs on Cubans' civil liberties has prompted resentment.[31][42]

Social media and the internet are used and show the democratizing and revolutionary potential of the internet, which "has become passé in most Western democracies given the dominance of a handful of Big Tech companies whose business model is based on mining our personal data for private profit and serving as unaccountable platforms for fake news and political polarization", according to Ted Henken for Slate. According to Henken, "in authoritarian contexts like Cuba, where the government has long since monopolized the mass media and transformed journalism into political propaganda, access to unfiltered channels of information and communication can indeed shift the balance of power in small but powerful ways."[43] In a July 2019 article for The Washington Post, Faiola stated that "Cubans are using social media to air their grievances — and the government is responding, sometimes." At that time, they were not demanding political change but wanted their government to be more responsive.[44] Due to the evolving crises, a social media campaign using the hashtags SOSCUBA and SOSMATANZAS was initiated to collect money, medical materials, food, and other supplies to be sent to Cuba.[40] Various international figures such as Don Omar, Ricardo Montaner, Alejandro Sanz, Nicky Jam, J Balvin, Daddy Yankee, Becky G, and Mia Khalifa joined the request.[45] The Cuban government recognized the crisis describing it as "very complex" but rejected a proposed humanitarian corridor and described the campaign as an attempt to misrepresent the situation.[46] Cuba set up a bank account to receive aid and said that it was open to receive donations, although the designated account is in a Cuban bank under United States sanctions. According to the Miami Herald, Cuba has historically refused or seized aid coming from Cuban exiles.[29][46]

Protests

11 July

Anti-government protesters destroying a car of the National Revolutionary Police Force. Looting also occurred, in part due to the socio-economic struggles.[11][12]

On 11 July 2021, at least two demonstrations emerged in San Antonio de los Baños, near Havana, and Palma Soriano, in the province of Santiago de Cuba, singing the song "Patria y Vida" ("Homeland and Life"). The song's name is an inversion of the Cuban Revolution motto Patria o Muerte ("Homeland or Death"). Videos of protesters singing slogans of "Freedom", "Down with communism", and "We are not afraid" were broadcast on social networks in addition to protesters demanding vaccines.[47][48] Opposition media outlets such as Martí Noticias have published social media videos of protests on the Malecón in Havana, Santiago, Santa Clara, Ciego de Ávila, Camagüey, Bayamo, Guantánamo, San José de las Lajas, Holguín, Cárdenas.[49] According to Orlando Gutiérrez, an exiled dissident of the Assembly of the Cuban Resistance, there were protests in more than fifteen cities and towns in Cuba.[50] Gutiérrez asked the United States government to lead an international intervention to prevent protesters from being "victims of a bloodbath".[50][51][52] The San Isidro Movement called on the protesters to march to Malecón in Havana.[47]

Pro-government counter-protesters in Cienfuegos

Cuban president and First Secretary of the Communist Party of Cuba Díaz-Canel said that the United States embargo against Cuba and economic sanctions were responsible for the conditions that led to the unrest.[31][7] He urged government-supporting citizens to take to the streets in counter-protest to respond to the demonstrations, saying in a special television broadcast: "The order to fight is given, the revolutionaries to the streets."[28][47] The Cuban government called the protests counter-revolutionary.[53] Younger Cubans comprised the majority of protesters, while some members of older generations responded to demonstrations, assisting Cuban authorities.[33]

Following Díaz-Canel's statements, about 300 government supporters arrived at El Capitolio; the Miami Herald reported that one Associated Press (AP) cameraman was assaulted by these counter-protesters while a separate AP photographer was injured by police.[29] AP photographer Ramon Espinosa was detained by authorities as well.[29] San Antonio residents reported that the police repressed protesters and detained certain participants.[54] In videos circulated on social media, people were seen throwing stones at police while reports of authorities beating demonstrators were heard.[29] By the evening, protests had dissipated.[33]

Cuban journalist Yoani Sánchez reported that after the protests on 11 July some were injured and there were hundreds of detentions.[55][56]

12 July

On 12 July, more protests were reported in Cuba.[57][58] A journalist from the Spanish newspaper ABC was arrested.[59][60][61][62] Internet watchdog NetBlocks reported that social media platforms in Cuba were censored beginning on 12 July 2021, although virtual private networks were able to bypass government blockages[63] and with a police presence in the streets of Havana. Dozens of women gathered in front of police stations to inquire about the whereabouts of their husbands, children and relatives arrested or disappeared during the events of the previous day.[64][65][66] Faced with the accusations of missing persons, Díaz-Canel stated: "They have already come up with the fact that in Cuba we repress, we murder. Where are the Cuban murders? Where is the Cuban repression? Where are the disappeared in Cuba?".[67]

A group of protesters in Havana

A meeting of the top leadership of the Communist Party of Cuba including former First Secretary Raúl Castro was held where the issue of the protests was addressed, releasing a statement that "the provocations orchestrated by counterrevolutionary elements, organized and financed from the United States with destabilizing purposes, were analyzed."[68] Díaz-Canel accused the United States of using a policy of "economic asphyxiation [to] cause social unrest" in Cuba.[69] Foreign Minister Bruno Rodríguez Parrilla labeled the protesters as vandals.[70] Authorities blocked access to social media platforms such as WhatsApp, Telegram, Facebook, and Instagram.[71]

Starting on 12 July, some abroad supporters and Cuban exiles in Florida called for military United States foreign intervention.[72][73][74] Miami mayor Francis X. Suarez stated the United States should consider air strikes against Cuba.[75] Some international politicians and abroad Cubans blamed the United States embargo against Cuba.[76] The Cuban government blamed the protests on United States interference and "U.S.-financed 'counter-revolutionaries' exploiting hardship caused by the decades-old U.S. trade embargo that Washington tightened in the midst of the pandemic, pushing the Cuban economy to the brink."[10][2]

13 July

The non-governmental organization Cuba Decide estimated a toll of five deaths during the protests.[24] During a live interview with the Spanish television program Todo es mentira, Cuban YouTuber and activist Dina Stars was detained by Cuban security officers.[77][78][79] She was later released after being accused of promoting protests in Cuba and stated that "they didn't torture me or kidnap me."[80] In Miami, Florida, protesters temporarily blocked the Palmetto Expressway in both directions in order to show support for the Cuban protesters.[81] Some newspapers reported that the protesters were in violation of a Florida anti-riot law; however, none of the protesters have been charged, and Governor of Florida Ron DeSantis said he did not think the law applied.[82][83][84]

In response to protesters tired of hardship and wanting change, former Cuban central bank economist Pavel Vidal stated: "There is a lack of credibility over the promised reforms. ... It's not just the economic crisis. People don't have hope in getting out of the crisis in a definitive way." The United States State Department said it expedites any request to export humanitarian or medical supplies to Cuba, which imported $123 million worth of chicken from the United States in the first six months of 2021.[4]

14 July

The web page CiberCuba released a video where allegedly a black beret-wearing group, the Cuban police, break into the house of a demonstrator and fire at him immediately in front of his wife and children, detaining him afterwards.[85] According to the organization of lawyers Cubalex, over 200 people have been detained and many remain in detention as of 15 July.[86][87] Deputy Minister of the Interior Jesús Manuel Burón Tabit questioned decision-making within the ministry and the Security Council as well as what he called the excessive use of police force to repress the demonstrations;[88] the Cuban government denied that he resigned after his statements.[89]

In order to deal with the shortages, the Cuban Chamber of Commerce lifted customs restrictions that limited imports of hygiene products, medicine and food, which one of the protesters demanded the government should do. Travelers would be allowed to bring these products into Cuba between 19 July and 31 December 2021 without being subject to customs duties.[90] In addition, directors of state-owned enterprises will be given the authority to determine their employees' salaries. Small- and medium-sized privately-owned businesses would be able to be organized. The government also announced it would be improving on the electricity system, of which problems ETECSA did not provide explanation until Foreign Minister Bruno Rodríguez Parrilla attribute them to power outages and difficulties with food or transportation.[91] Access to internet in Cuba was partially restored, although with an unstable network of intermittent functionality, while access to social media and instant messaging applications remained blocked.[92]

Díaz-Canel stated that there are three kinds of protesters: counter-revolutionaries, criminals, and those with legitimate frustrations.[2] In a national address on Wednesday evening, Díaz-Canel called on Cubans not to "act with hate" but also admitted some failures by the government, explaining: "We have to gain experience from the disturbances. We also have to carry out a critical analysis of our problems in order to act and overcome, and avoid their repetition."[93]

17 July

Pro-government activists held a massive rally in Havana along the city's waterfront. Castro and Díaz-Canel spoke during the event, which was attended by tens of thousands, making it the largest demonstration thus far.[94] The turnout at the rally was said by the government to be around 100,000.[95]

Reactions

Protests abroad

Protest against the Cuban government in Naples, Florida

Cubans residing in Chile marched to the Cuban consulate in Santiago in support of the protests.[96] Protests in Miami urging the United States to provide aid for the protests in Cuba have taken place.[97] Demonstrations also took place at the Puerta del Sol in Madrid, Spain.[49] In Buenos Aires, Argentina, a protest took place in front of the Cuban embassy in Buenos Aires with protesters holding placards with the phrases "Patria y vida" and others with the slogan "S.O.S. Cuba".[98] In São Paulo, Brazil, political parties and social movements staged a protest in favor of the Cuban government and "in defense of sovereignty" in front of the Consulate General of Cuba.[99]

On 13 July 2021, a protest march was held starting at 6 pm between North Bergen, New Jersey, and West New York. The march would go along Bergenline Avenue, starting at 79th Street in North Bergen and ending at 60th Street in West New York. Northern Hudson County in Northern Hudson, New Jersey, has a sizable Cuban American population in it.[100] Three people were arrested in Tampa, Florida, during a demonstration in support of the protests on the evening of 13 July 2021. Two of those were arrested under Florida's recently passed anti-riot law, the Combating Public Disorder Act.[101]

On 15 July 2021, a small group of Florida State University students with the Cuban-American Student Association gathered at the Florida State Capitol in solidarity with the demonstrators.[102] On 16 July 2021, protestors scrawled Cuba Libre ("Free Cuba") on the street outside the Embassy of Cuba in Washington, D.C.[103] In Miami, "a few dozen" would march for about 2twomiles along Eight Street.[104] Protests outside of Miami in Florida would be seen that day in Fort Myers, Florida with protesters walking along the Fort Myers Music Walk located in the city's downtown area.[105]

On 13 and 16 July 2021, demonstrations of Cuban exiles occurred in Downtown Halifax, Canada. Protesters wore signs in support of those in Cuba, some of them calling for an international military intervention in the island nation. Protesters also chanted the song Patria y Vida ("Homeland and Life"). One protestor told the local press: "Tell the world that we are fighting for our freedom."[106]

Governments

A protest against the Cuban government in Copley Square in Boston, Massachusetts
  •  Argentina's President Alberto Fernández said that he could not say exactly what was happening in Cuba but supported the end of the United States embargo against Cuba.[107]
  •  Bolivia's President Luis Arce expressed his support for the Cuban people who "fight against destabilizing actions."[108] Former President Evo Morales accused the United States of launching a new Operation Condor.[109]
  •  Brazil's President Jair Bolsonaro commented that it was a sad day for Cuba because people requested freedom and received shots, attacks, and prison instead. He said that there are people in Brazil who support Cuba, Venezuela, and "those kinds of people."[110]
  •  Canada said it "supports the right to freedom of expression and assembly and calls on all parties to uphold this fundamental right." Global Affairs Canada said that all sides should "exercise restraint" and "engage in peaceful and inclusive dialogue."[111]
  •  Chile's Ministry of Foreign Affairs issued a statement condemning the repression in order "to silence protesters who peacefully claim greater freedom, better health system and better quality of life." It also added that "freedom of expression and peaceful assembly must be guaranteed."[112]
  •  China's Foreign Ministry Spokesman Zhao Lijian called for the lifting of the United States embargo on Cuba, which he said was responsible for shortage of medicine and energy in the country.[113]
  •  Ecuador's President Guillermo Lasso called on the Cuban government to "start a democratic process to put an end to this situation."[114]
  •  Mexico's President Andrés Manuel López Obrador said: "I want to express my solidarity with the Cuban people. I believe that a solution must be found through dialogue without the use of force, without confrontation, without violence. And it has to be Cubans who decide because Cuba is a free country, independent and sovereign. There must not be interventionism, and the health situation of the Cuban people must not be used with political purposes."[115] López Obrador offered Mexico's help with food and vaccines, and said that the best way to help Cuba is to end the United States blockade.[116]
  •  Nicaragua's President Daniel Ortega sent his expressions of support to Miguel Díaz-Canel, condemning the "permanent blockade, destabilization and aggression" against Cuba.[117][118]
  •  North Korea's Ministry of Foreign Affairs stated through its spokesperson that "the anti-government protests that occurred in Cuba are an outcome of behind-the-scene manipulation by the outside forces coupled with their persistent anti-Cuba blockade scheming to obliterate socialism and the revolution", and expressed its support to the Cuban government.[119]
  •  Peru's Interim President Francisco Sagasti supported the protesters to "express freely and peacefully" and invoked the Cuban authorities to "consider their requirements in a democratic spirit."[120]
  •  Russia's Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Russia stated through its spokesperson Maria Zakharova that it is "unacceptable for there to be outside interference in the internal affairs of a sovereign state or any destructive actions that would encourage the destabilization of the situation on the island."[121]
  •  Saint Vincent and the Grenadines's Prime Minister Ralph Gonsalves issued a statement in support of the Cuban government.[122]
  •  Spain's Ministry of Foreign Affairs released a statement recognizing the right of Cubans "to demonstrate freely and peacefully" and that "forms of aid that could alleviate the situation" will be studied.[123] In Spain, the Cuban protests provoked debate and political controversy, as Spanish right-wing politicians demanded a more serious condemnation of the Cuban government from the Spanish authorities, that the Spanish government qualify it as a dictatorship, and that Spain make the European Union adopt an active opposition policy towards it. When asked if Cuba was a dictatorship, left-wing Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez responded: "It is evident that Cuba is not a democracy. That said, it has to be Cuban society that finds that path (of prosperity) and the international community that helps it find that path." These acts from right-wing politicians have received criticism, being accused of using the protests as an opposition tactic against Sánchez-led left-wing government. The lack of similar harsh condemnation by the political right against events in other countries, such as in Colombia, human rights in Qatar and Saudi Arabia, and Abdel Fattah el-Sisi's repression in Egypt, was also criticized.[124]
  •  United States' President Joe Biden said that he supports the Cuban people and their "clarion call for freedom and relief."[125][126] Julie J. Chung, Acting Assistant Secretary for the Bureau of Western Hemisphere Affairs for the United States Department of State, stated: "We are deeply concerned by 'calls to combat' in Cuba. We stand by the Cuban people's right for peaceful assembly. We call for calm and condemn any violence."[29] On 12 July, the White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki told reporters: "A Cuba policy shift is not currently among President Biden's top priorities."[127]
  •  Uruguay's President Luis Lacalle Pou expressed his support for the opposition protesters, saying they had "commendable courage."[128]
  •  Venezuela's President Nicolás Maduro expressed "all the support to the Cuban revolutionary government" on a phone call to Díaz-Canel.[129]
  •  Vietnam urged the United States to "take concrete steps in the direction of normalizing relations with Cuba for the benefit of the two peoples, contributing to peace, stability and development in the region and the world."[130]

Supranational organizations

Human rights groups

Others

  • Mayor of Miami Francis X. Suarez, a Cuban American, stated it was time for a United States-led international intervention in Cuba, saying: "We are asking the federal government to do everything possible and not waste this moment."[29]
  • Republican Senator from Florida Marco Rubio demanded President Joe Biden to call on Cuba's military to support protesters, while Democratic Senator from New Jersey Bob Menendez said the United States should "stand in solidarity with the brave people of Cuba that are risking their lives today for change in their country and a future of Patria y Vida."[29] Democratic Senator from Connecticut Chris Murphy argued that the embargo against Cuba had not worked and empowered the Cuban government.[135]
  • Venezuelan opposition leader Juan Guaidó declared that "the desire for change, freedom and the demand for fundamental rights are irrepressible forces. From Venezuela, we reiterate our support for the entire pro-democracy movement in Cuba."[136]
  • Mauricio Macri, former president of Argentina, distanced himself from President Fernández and gave his full support to the demonstrators, saying: "I want to support the Cuban people in the streets requesting the end of the dictatorship and an improvement of their life conditions. Let them know that all the people in the continent and the world who share the value of liberty are with them." Similar messages were delivered by Horacio Rodríguez Larreta, mayor of Buenos Aires, and María Eugenia Vidal, former governor of the Buenos Aires Province. Macri also signed a letter of the Democratic Initiative of Spain and the Americas, alongside other former presidents.[137]
  • Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, former Brazilian president, said during a candidacy for president event next year in Brazil that if Cuba did not have a blockade by the United States, the country "could be Holland", and said that the blockade was a form of "killing human beings without being at war."[138]
  • The far-right Serbian Radical Party (SRS) accused the United States of trying to "provoke a coup in Cuba and forcibly overthrow President Miguel Díaz-Canel", while adding that Serbia should be included in sending humanitarian aid to Cuba, considering that "Cuba is a friendly state that has not recognized the self-proclaimed independence of the so-called Kosovo."[139]
  • Expressing support for the protesters, Representative from New York Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez condemned the "anti-democratic actions" of the government of President Miguel Díaz-Canel, saying: "The suppression of media, speech and protest are all gross violations of civil rights." She also called on the Biden administration to end the embargo, stating: "The embargo is absurdly cruel and, like too many other U.S. policies targeting Latin Americans, the cruelty is the point. I outright reject the Biden administration's defense of the embargo."[140]
  • Pope Francis called for peace and dialogue in Cuba, stating: "I am also close to the dear people of Cuba in these difficult times."[141]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c "High prices, food shortages fuel Cuba's biggest anti-government protests in decades". Havana. CBS News. 12 July 2021. Archived from the original on 12 July 2021. Retrieved 12 July 2021.
  2. ^ a b c d e Acosta, Nelson; Marsh, Sarah (15 July 2021). "Cuba lifts food, medicine customs restrictions after protests". Reuters. Archived from the original on 15 July 2021. Retrieved 16 July 2021.
  3. ^ Forde, Kaelyn (16 July 2021). "Cuba protests: The economic woes driving discontent". Al Jazeera. Retrieved 18 July 2021. Cubans have taken to the streets in cities across the country over the last week, in a wave of rare public protests to express their frustration with rising prices, falling wages, the United States embargo and the failings of the island's long-standing communist government to address its economic challenges.
  4. ^ a b c d Sesin, Carmen (13 July 2021). "Cuba's protests rocked the entire island. Here's why people flooded the streets". NBC News. Archived from the original on 14 July 2021. Retrieved 16 July 2021.
  5. ^ Kirby, Jen (15 July 2021). "Artists laid the foundation for Cuba's protests. An economy in free fall and the pandemic ignited it". Vox. Retrieved 18 July 2021.
  6. ^ a b Fleischman, Luis (16 July 2021). "Análisis de la revuelta en Cuba: una situación inevitable". El País (in Spanish).
  7. ^ a b Oppmann, Patrick (11 July 2021). "Cubans take to streets in rare protests over lack of freedom, economy". CNN. Archived from the original on 11 July 2021. Retrieved 12 July 2021.
  8. ^ a b Faiola, Anthony (12 July 2021). "Cubans hold biggest anti-government protests in decades; Biden says U.S. stands with people". The Washington Post. ISSN 0190-8286. Archived from the original on 12 July 2021. Retrieved 15 July 2021.
  9. ^ a b c Harrup, Anthony; Pérez, Santiago. (14 July 2021). "What Is Happening in Cuba? Protests Grow Against the Communist Regime". Archived 13 July 2021 at the Wayback Machine. The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved 15 July 2021.
  10. ^ a b c Acosta, Nelson; Marsh, Sarah (12 July 2021). "Cuba arrests activists as government blames unrest on US interference". Reuters. Archived from the original on 13 July 2021. Retrieved 14 July 2021.
  11. ^ a b Robles, Frances (11 July 2021). "Cubans Denounce 'Misery' in Biggest Protests in Decades". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Archived from the original on 11 July 2021. Retrieved 15 July 2021.
  12. ^ a b "Cuba protests: Thousands rally against government as economy struggles". BBC News. 13 July 2021. Archived from the original on 14 July 2021. Retrieved 15 July 2021.
  13. ^ "Cuba erupts in protests against authoritarian government". News.com.au. 12 July 2021. Archived from the original on 13 July 2021. Retrieved 16 July 2021.
  14. ^ "Cuba lifts food, medicine customs restrictions amid protests". Al Jazeera. 15 July 2021. Archived from the original on 16 July 2021. Retrieved 15 July 2021.
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