The Jerusalem Post

Cuban gov’t holds mass rally in Havana after protests

- • By NELSON ACOSTA

HAVANA (Reuters) – Raul Castro was among thousands who attended a government-organized rally in Havana on Saturday to denounce the US trade embargo and reaffirm their support for Cuba’s revolution, a week after unpreceden­ted protests rocked the communist-run country.

Government supporters gathered on the city’s seafront boulevard before dawn to wave Cuban flags and photos of late revolution­ary leader Fidel Castro and his brother Raul. The latter retired as Communist Party leader in April but promised to continue fighting for the revolution as a “foot soldier.”

The rally was a reaction to demonstrat­ions that erupted nationwide last Sunday amid widespread shortages of basic goods, demands for political rights and the island nation’s worst coronaviru­s outbreak since the start of the pandemic.

The government admitted some shortcomin­gs this week but mostly blamed the protests on US-financed “counter-revolution­aries” exploiting economic hardship caused by US sanctions.

President Miguel Diaz-Canel, who also heads the Communist Party, told the crowd that Cuba’s “enemy has once again

thrown itself into destroying citizen’s sacred unity and tranquilit­y.”

He said it was no small matter to call a rally as the country saw increasing numbers of COVID cases: “We convened you to denounce once more the blockade, the aggression and terror.”

Authoritie­s said similar rallies were held nationwide.

“This revolution will continue for a long time,” said Margaritza Arteaga, a state social worker who attended the rally in Havana.

Workers had been convened by neighborho­od block committees,

known as the Committees for the Defense of the Revolution, she said, and a state bus had picked her up at 4 a.m.

Shortly before the rally in Havana officially began, authoritie­s removed a man shouting anti-government slogans including “freedom” from the crowd.

The number of those detained during or after protests has grown as new reports trickle in amid irregular outages in internet and messaging applicatio­ns on the island where the state has a monopoly on telecommun­ications.

 ?? (Alexandre Meneghini/Reuters) ?? PEOPLE CARRY a poster with photograph­s of Cuba’s late president Fidel Castro, President and First Secretary of the Communist Party Miguel Diaz-Canel and former president and First Secretary of the Communist Party Raul Castro during a rally in Havana yesterday.
(Alexandre Meneghini/Reuters) PEOPLE CARRY a poster with photograph­s of Cuba’s late president Fidel Castro, President and First Secretary of the Communist Party Miguel Diaz-Canel and former president and First Secretary of the Communist Party Raul Castro during a rally in Havana yesterday.

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