Strona główna Aktualności Díaz-Canel atakuje, gdy Trump podnosi perspektywę działań USA wobec Kuby | CBC...

Díaz-Canel atakuje, gdy Trump podnosi perspektywę działań USA wobec Kuby | CBC News

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Prowadzący: Trump chce wyeliminować Díaz-Canela
Podczas gdy rząd kubański narzuca ciężkie ograniczenia sektorowi prywatnemu kraju, dziesięciolecia sankcji ze strony USA sparaliżowały gospodarkę Kuby.
Administracja Trumpa chce, aby Díaz-Canel zrezygnował, gdy USA kontynuuje negocjacje z rządem kubańskim, zgodnie z informacjami uzyskanymi przez oficjalnego przedstawiciela USA i źródło zaznajomione z rozmowami między Waszyngtonem a Hawaną.

Kubański dziennikarz Daniel Montero powiedział w programie As It Happens CBC Radio w środę, że choć przerwy w dostawach prądu na Kubie nie są niczym nowym, blokada ropy ze strony USA sprawia, że warunki stają się znacznie gorsze.
„Agenda, którą Stany Zjednoczone mają w tej sprawie, polega na stworzeniu warunków na tyle okropnych na wyspie, że ludzie zbuntują się przeciwko rządowi” – powiedział z Hawany.
„To zawsze był cel sankcji. To zmiana reżimu poprzez głód.”

Trump’s comments on Cuba came more than two months after his administration’s military raid that captured then-Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro in January, and a few weeks after the launch of joint U.S.-Israeli military strikes against Iran on Feb. 28.
The administration has effectively halted vital oil exports to Cuba, pushing the Caribbean nation to the brink. The Cuban people that Trump and Rubio say they want to help have been left reeling.
Cuban doctor, Jesus Garcia, 62, cast doubt on the idea that the Trump administration would remove Díaz-Canel from power or intervene in Cuba, rolling his eyes at Trump’s comments.
„Americans can say whatever they want. The ones who decide what is done here in Cuba are the Cuban people,” Garcia said.
Maria del Carmen Companioni, 51, said in the face of a political back and forth between the two governments, regular Cubans like her are left struggling with the soaring prices and no clear pathway forward.
„Really, all of this has people very alarmed and in a bad state. No one knows what is going to happen.”

Costa Rica closes embassy
Also Wednesday, Costa Rica’s President Rodrigo Chaves said his administration did not recognize Cuba’s government as legitimate and would close the Cuban embassy in its capital San Jose.
„Costa Rica does not recognize the legitimacy of Cuba’s Communist regime, given the mistreatment, repression, and undignified conditions endured by the inhabitants of that beautiful island,” Chaves said at an event attended by the U.S. ambassador.
„We must cleanse the hemisphere of Communists,” Chaves said.
The Cuban government sharply criticized Costa Rica’s move, calling it an „arbitrary decision” made under pressure by the U.S. in an effort to isolate the island.
„The Costa Rican government, which displays a history of subordination to United States policy against Cuba, once again joins the offensive by the U.S. government in its renewed attempts to isolate our country,” Cuba’s foreign ministry said in a statement.

Earlier this month, Ecuador also closed its Cuban embassy, after declaring Cuban Ambassador Basilio Gutierrez and his diplomatic staff „persona non grata.”
Ecuador’s and Costa Rica’s presidents were among a raft of right-wing-aligned Latin American presidents to attend an anti-crime summit Trump hosted in Florida this month, known as „Shield of the Americas.”
Costa Rica’s announcement comes as a slate of countries in Central America and the Caribbean announced they will end agreements to hire Cuban medics in their countries — an important source of foreign income for the Cuban government and a source of medical services in often under-served rural communities.
The U.S. had accused the program of exploiting its workers and threatened sanctions on officials from countries that take in Cuban workers.
Cuba has faced a longstanding U.S. economic embargo, which its government blames for its economic crisis that has prompted more than one million people to leave the island.
Most countries globally oppose the embargo, but in October, Argentina and Paraguay joined a handful of countries in shifting their support to the United States in a United Nations vote.