Miami Herald

Pentagon investigat­es claim a drone strike in Somalia killed two kidnapped Cuban doctors

- BY NORA GÁMEZ TORRES ngameztorr­es@elnuevoher­ald.com

The fate of two Cuban doctors kidnapped by an al-Qaeda-linked group in Somalia five years ago is uncertain as the Pentagon said it is investigat­ing claims the two were killed during an American drone strike against the terrorist organizati­on.

The militant group al-Shabaab violently abducted doctors Assel Herrera Correa, a specialist in general medicine, and Landy Rodriguez Hernandez, a surgeon, from nearby Kenya in April 2019. The group claimed in a statement that the Cubans were killed in an American drone strike in the city of Jilib in central Somalia on Feb. 15.

Their claims have not been independen­tly verified.

Maj. Pete Nguyen, a Department of Defense spokesman, confirmed “there was an airstrike conducted against the al-Shabaab network on Feb. 15 near Jilib, Somalia.”

He said the Pentagon was aware of reports of “a strike alleged to have killed two civilians. We do not have any further informatio­n at this time about these reports, but we do take all claims of civilian casualties seriously.”

He said that the U.S. Africa Command, which works with the Somali army to attack al-Shaabab targets, was still assessing the results of the operation.

On Friday, the president of Cuba’s National Assembly, Esteban Lazo, met with the president of Kenya, William Ruto, to seek clarity on the situation of the kidnapped doctors, the Cuban Foreign Ministry said.

Ruto said Lazo brought “a special message” from Cuban leader Miguel Díaz-Canel and praised the relationsh­ip between the two countries but did not mention the doctors in postings on X.

Foreign Minister Bruno Rodríguez thanked Ruto for receiving Lazo at short notice. “We have confidence in his willingnes­s to support efforts to clarify the situation facing Cuban doctors,” he wrote on X.

Rodríguez also said he had spoken with Somalia’s foreign affairs minister, Ali Mohamed Omar. “We talked about the necessary cooperatio­n to clarify the current situation of our beloved doctors,” Rodríguez said.

Despite negotiatio­ns and at least two rescue attempts by Kenyan and Somali forces, the doctors remained in the hands of al-Shaabab. The two had been sent to the Kenyan border city of Mandera in 2018 as part of an official deal to send Cuban doctors to Kenya and Kenyan physicians to Cuba to get training.

Cuba relies on its controvers­ial medical missions to earn foreign currency. The missions are riddled with complaints that the Cuban government keeps most of the doctor’s salaries, restricts their movements and punishes those who decide to abandon their posts. The United States regards the missions as “forced labor” and has included Cuba on a human-traffickin­g blacklist.

“Assel and Landy represent the noble and generous spirit of a people who share even what they do not have, with the humble of the earth,” Díaz-Canel said on X. “Cuba does not lose hope of finding them alive. We will do so as long as there is no official confirmati­on that they have died.”

Nora Gámez Torres: 305-376-2169, @ngameztorr­es

 ?? ?? Assel Herrera Correa, above, a generalist doctor, and Landy Rodriguez Hernandez, a surgeon, were kidnapped in 2019 in Mandera, Kenya, by the group al-Shabaab.
Assel Herrera Correa, above, a generalist doctor, and Landy Rodriguez Hernandez, a surgeon, were kidnapped in 2019 in Mandera, Kenya, by the group al-Shabaab.

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