Cuba asks US to respect communism

Published December 21, 2014
Miami (Florida, USA): Writer Vanessa Garcia poses for a photo at her home on Friday. “My family always said they weren’t going back until Fidel died,” said Garcia, a 35-year-old writer in Miami whose parents left Cuba in the 1960s. “It seems like the (US) embargo was something that was hurting us rather than helping us in many ways. It’s lasted much longer than anybody thought it would.”—AP
Miami (Florida, USA): Writer Vanessa Garcia poses for a photo at her home on Friday. “My family always said they weren’t going back until Fidel died,” said Garcia, a 35-year-old writer in Miami whose parents left Cuba in the 1960s. “It seems like the (US) embargo was something that was hurting us rather than helping us in many ways. It’s lasted much longer than anybody thought it would.”—AP

HAVANA: President Raul Castro demanded on Saturday that the United States respect Cuba’s communist rule as the two countries work to restore diplomatic ties, and warned that Cuban-American exiles might try to sabotage the rapprochement. US President Barack Obama this week reset Washington’s Cold War-era policy on Cuba and the two countries swapped prisoners in a historic deal after 18 months of secret talks.

Cubans have treated the end of open US hostility as a triumph, especially the release of three Cuban intelligence agents who served long US prison terms for spying on Cuban exile groups in Florida.

US officials will visit Havana in January to start talks on normalising relations and Obama has said his government will push Cuba on issues of human and political rights as they negotiate over the coming months.

Castro said he is open to discussing a wide range of issues but that they should also cover the United States and he insisted Cuba would not give up its socialist principles. “In the same way that we have never demanded that the United States change its political system, we will demand respect for ours,” Castro told the National Assembly.

He again praised Obama for the policy change in a speech that became a partly defiant, partly celebratory show of pride for resisting five decades of US aggression.

Despite the markedly improved tone in relations, Castro said Cuba faces a “long and difficult struggle” before the United States removes a decades-old economic embargo against the island, in part because influential Cuban-American exiles will attempt to “sabotage the process”.

Published in Dawn, December 21st, 2014

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