Statement of the Communist Party of Ireland on the continuing inclusion of Cuba on the us list of “state sponsors of terrorism”.
The Communist Party of Ireland denounces the unjust and undemocratic decision of the US government to keep Cuba on the List of countries that “sponsor terrorism”.
Although Cuba does not appear on the current list of countries that “do not fully cooperate with US counter-terrorism efforts in the calendar year 2023” contained in US Secretary of State Blinken’s report to Congress, Cuba remains on the existing US list.
Declaración del Partido Comunista de Irlanda: Denuncia la injusta y antidemocrática decisión del gobierno estadounidense de mantener a Cuba en la Lista de países que “patrocinan el terrorismo”.
Aunque Cuba no aparece en la lista actual de países que “no cooperan plenamente con los esfuerzos antiterroristas de Estados Unidos en el año calendario 2023” contenida en el informe del Secretario de Estado de Estados Unidos, Blinken, al Congreso, Cuba permanece en la lista estadounidense existente.
Statement of the Association of Cuban Residents in Ireland. Dublin, May 24, 2024.
On May 15, the Cuban Ministry of Foreign Affairs published a Declaration in which it denounces the unjust permanence of Cuba on the List of countries that sponsor terrorism.
It also warns that Cuba remains on said List, even though it does not appear, as in previous years, in the report to Congress, sent by the Secretary of State, Antony Blinken, that same day, about the countries that "do not fully cooperate with US counterterrorism efforts in calendar year 2023.”
Interview granted by Miguel Mario Díaz-Canel Bermúdez, First Secretary of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of Cuba and President of the Republic, to Ignacio Ramonet, Spanish professor and journalist, at the Palace of the Revolution, on May 11,
Ignacio Ramonet: President, first of all I would like to thank you very much for your kindness in granting us this interview.
This is going to be an interview of about ten questions that we are going to divide into three blocks: one block devoted to domestic policy, to the domestic situation in Cuba; a second block on the economy, essentially the economy in Cuba, obviously; and a third block on international policy.
The first question then on domestic policy is the following: