Legislators and parliaments of all latitudes convey their satisfaction at the exclusion of this Caribbean nation from the US State Department’s list of countries that allegedly sponsor terrorism, and reaffirm their repudiation of the blockade of that northern power, the ANPP said.
According to that organ, among others, the President of the National Assembly of the Republic of Namibia, Peter Katjavivi, who considered this decision of Washington as a positive step forward for the future of relations between Cuba and the United States.
For her part, the Colombian senator, Gloria Flórez, stressed in her account on X, that justice is done with a people who have given the best of themselves for peace in their country and who should not have been included in the list.
She added that “Colombians, although not all responsible, apologize for the infamy committed by the government of Iván Duque,” and expressed the relevance of compensating the damages caused by the unjust measure against the Cuban people.
For her part, the president of the Peru-Cuba Parliamentary Friendship League, Silvana Robles, considered the recent decision of the US government correct, since the inclusion of Cuba in that list was an arbitrary designation that should never have been applied.
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