The Borneo Post

Cuban president defends ally Maduro on first foreign visit

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CARACAS: Cuban President Miguel Diaz- Canel rallied to the defence of embattled ally Nicolas Maduro on his fi rst foreign visit Wednesday, calling on Latin American nations to support his Venezuelan counterpar­t’s cause.

The Cuban, who succeeded Raul Castro on April 19, was received with open arms by Maduro’s government — Cuba’s closest political and economic ally — on his arrival at Caracas’ Maiquetia airport.

“Very happy to be in Venezuela; and long live the Bolivarian revolution, and also, long live President Maduro,” Diaz- Canel said.

After being honoured at the presidenti­al palace by Maduro, Diaz- Canel stressed: “No matter how big the troubles and challenges may be, you can rely on Cuba — today and always. The support is unconditio­nal.”

Diaz-Canel said the main reason for his visit to Venezuela was to show solidarity with Maduro after his May 20 re- election was widely dismissed as a sham by the US, EU and 13 other Latin American states.

He described the elections, boycotted by the main opposition, as an ‘overwhelmi­ng success’.

“Maybe that sound rising up from the majority so bothered the US and the right that they are not capable of recognisin­g legitimacy,” he said.

The Cuban leader’s visit coincided with Canada’s announceme­nt of further sanctions against Maduro associates, including his wife Cilia Flores, for holding ‘illegitima­te and antidemocr­atic’ elections.

Canada rejected the result as ‘ fraudulent’, and along with its G7 partners has called on Maduro to schedule another vote, release all political prisoners and restore the authority of the country’s National Assembly.

Beaten candidate Henri Falcon has called for fresh elections and fi led an appeal with the country’s highest court Wednesday to have the result annulled.

Speaking to the Constituen­t Assembly — set up by Maduro last year to usurp the opposition­dominated body — Diaz-Canel said the main purpose of internatio­nal sanctions was to obliterate Maduro’s reelection victory.

And he called on ‘ the people of the Americas’ to show solidarity as Venezuela resists a ‘ political, diplomatic, economic and financial war’ waged by what he called US ‘imperialis­m’.

Venezuela under Maduro had fallen victim to “the imperialis­t actions of submission, harassment, isolation and blockades,” DiazCanel told the Assembly to loud cheers.

The 58-year- old Diaz- Canel, who before his address laid a floral wreath at the grave of independen­ce leaderSimo­nBolivar at Caracas’ National Pantheon, called on Venezuela to ‘repudiate with firmness’ Washington’s attempts to return to ‘ the period of interventi­onism’. The US has maintained an economic embargo on the Communist-run island since the early 1960s.

Diaz- Canel was also expected to visit the tomb of late president Hugo Chavez, who forged close ties with Fidel and Raul Castro during his 1999-2013 presidency, which included supplying cheap oil to Cuba.

Venezuela once exported as much as 100,000 barrels of oil a day to Cuba in exchange for Cuban medical staff, coaches, social organisers and military advisers. — AFP

 ??  ?? Maduro (right) and Diaz-Canel shake hands during his welcoming ceremony at the Miraflores Palace in Caracas. — Reuters photo
Maduro (right) and Diaz-Canel shake hands during his welcoming ceremony at the Miraflores Palace in Caracas. — Reuters photo

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