Bangkok Post

More medics join ICC ‘slavery’ case

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HAVANA: Hundreds more Cuban medics have joined a case against Havana at the Internatio­nal Criminal Court, accusing the government of submitting its overseas medical corps to “slavery”, an NGO said on Tuesday.

The medical corps, a flagship initiative started in the 1960s, is one of the Cuban government’s most lucrative sources of income and employs thousands of profession­als in dozens of countries.

But the lawsuit accuses former president Raul Castro and current leader Miguel Diaz-Canel of crimes against humanity for running a programme that acts as a form of modern slavery.

The Cuban Prisoners Defenders (CPD) advocacy group and a political group called the Cuban Patriotic Union filed the case in May last year, initially including 110 testimonie­s by doctors.

But last month hundreds more joined the case, which now counts the testimonie­s of 622 doctors, the CPD said.

Speaking in Madrid, CPD president Dr Javier Larrondo said the doctors had given accounts that were “identical or very similar” showing they had suffered from “slavery”.

Last year, Luis Almagro, secretary-general of the Organizati­on of American States, described the medical corps programme as “a system of modern slavery”.

It involved “tens of thousands of people who are forced to live abroad without knowing where they are going next, whose passports are confiscate­d, who are controlled by intelligen­ce agents and have most of their earnings confiscate­d by the Cuban government”, he said.

Manoreys Rojas, a trauma specialist, told reporters that since giving up his position in Ecuador in 2015, he had not been allowed back to see his family in Cuba and was even refused entry when his daughter attempted suicide in 2018.

“I have tried to see them in various different ways and I’ve not been able to,” he said, fighting back tears.

The case, which has been shrugged off by Havana, centres on Cuba’s decades-old tradition of “medical diplomacy” in which teams of medical profession­als, mostly doctors, are sent to work abroad for three-year periods during which most of their salaries are paid directly to the Cuban government.

A cornerston­e of Cuban foreign policy, the programme is the island’s most important source of income bringing in US$11 billion (346.1 billion baht) in revenue between 2011-2015 — more than tourism and nickel exports.

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