Cuba demands its right to happiness 

people demonstrated in Havana to demand their rights from the U.S. government
Photo: Estudios Revolución

More than 500,000 people flooded Havana’s Malecon this Friday to send, as a message across the ocean, a claim to the U.S. government against the blockade and the permanence of Cuba on the list of alleged state sponsors of terrorism.

The first secretary of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of Cuba and President of the Republic, Miguel Díaz-Canel Bermúdez, condemned U.S. President Joe Biden for continuing the hostility of his predecessor, Donald Trump, who will return to the White House in January.

He highlighted the arrogance to keep the Island on the aforementioned list, a doubly immoral accusation, since it comes from an administration that promotes violent actions against the largest of the Antilles and has become an asylum for the members of that machinery of hatred.

Photo: Estudios Revolución

In contrast, there is no rancor against the northern people, but in the face of imperialism and its attempts to destroy our sovereignty, “we will demonstrate today, tomorrow and always,” Díaz-Canel assured.

In the presence of Army General Raúl Castro Ruz, leader of the Cuban Revolution, Yankiel Cardoso Muñoz, president of the Ceiba-Kolhy Popular Council, demonstrated in the capital’s Playa neighborhood.

He explained to his son Antuán Cardoso Chaviano, with the phrase “I want to grow up without a blockade” on his sweater, how these measures limit his happiness.

Meanwhile, Yolanda Isabel Acosta Rosell, a 7-year-old student, asked her mother to take her for the first time to a mobilization of such magnitude and said: “I was born here and I’m going to stay here”.

Colombian Silvia Juliana Casadiegos González has been studying at the Latin American School of Medicine since 2019, thanks to Cuba’s role in the peace process in her nation. “They have help me fulfill my dream and, for this reason, they deserve to be unblocked.”