In a statement, the organization also pledge their supported for Cuban president, Miguel Díaz-Canel, and “the country’s top leadership, knowing that they desire the well-being and supreme happiness of our nation.”
On the other hand, they condemned the over 60-year-old US blockade on their motherland, arguing that such sanctions deprive Cuba of access to the world market and to unrestricted international trade as well as to foreign financing, in an open violation of international law by Washington.
“It is public knowledge that there is a law enacted and implemented by the United States government, which prohibits and restricts the commercial and financial trade of all nations of the world with Cuba, causing systematic calamities and suffering to our nation,” they noted.
This blockade, they added, generates direct and indirect unrest and discontent among the population.
In his opinion, no nation in the world has experienced firsthand the policies of massive and collective genocide that the United States implements against the people of Cuba, which is a crime against humanity and causes deaths, backwardness, suffering, hardships and lack of opportunities.
Last Friday, Cuba’s national electric grid collapsed, leading to subsequent failures that thwarted first efforts to restore the system, until early Monday, when first signs of normalcy began to appear.
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