APP GRATIS

Cubans die and late Castroism selling medical services

The permanence of Cuba on the black list of human traffickers and as a sponsor of terrorism are hard blows to Havana.


This article is from 1 year ago

The United States has put its finger on the sore, keeping late Castroism in the shadows.blacklist of human traffickers; when Cubans are dying due to lack of medical care and medicines and Havana remains committed to selling slaves in white coats to half the world, with the consent of the world and Pan-American Health organizations; drilled by Cuban Intelligence since the 70s of the last century.

Washington's sanction is also a recognition of the work ofCuba Archive and its sensible executive director, María Werlau, the first to denounce the outrageous business, with her usual rigor and the simplicity of calling a spade a spade; as a symptom of resistance to the generalized decadence that misnames things, including the abuses of the oldest dictatorship in the West; that alsoto sell human blood, derivatives and organs; and right now the hospitals Holguín cannot perform blood transfusions.

The figures ofdead Cubans in 2021 are chilling, that a young man dieschronically ill due to delay of an ambulance; species of extinction in Cuba, is an attack against the poor of the island; that children and adults die fromdengue, reveals the communist epidemiological disaster.

All these deaths occur when the late Castro regime continues to renthealthcare personnel to the highest bidder; when he invested millions of dollars inpropaganda vaccines anti Covid-19, which reduced resources to thepharmaceutical production, and in luxury hotels; without having tourists to occupy those built before and inherited from capitalism.

Castro's desire to compete with large capitalist companies, including pharmaceutical holding companies, reveals his chronic dementia, lack of realistic perspective and understanding that any medical power requires large financial investments; but those delusions of the hospital, the textile industry, the sugar harvest and the production offoods largest in Latin America ended up crashing into theacute shortage of medicines and the new pose of many doctors, who look at the hands of their patients; to see what they bring, rather than to the eyes to discover what makes them sick.

The nonsense that Cuban doctors and health personnel go to areas with little or no health coverage in foreign countries crashes against the presence of specialists in oil-rich Middle Eastern countries; and the working and salary conditions that it imposes on its white-coated hostages.

Nobody sensible opposes Cuba selling medical services to third countries, but rejects that doctors and nurses are exploited, usurping up to 75% of their salaries and used as political sergeants of governments allied to late Castroism; a doctor swears to heal, not poison and - if a government takes most of his income for working in remote or difficult conditions; always according to the official liturgy - that regime shamelessly humiliates and steals.

When one of the white-coated slaves becomes a maroon; suffers the seven communist plagues, which includes the seizure of the part of the salary deposited in a state bank by government imposition and an eight-year forced banishment; legal limit in which the dispossessed cannot claim the money earned, legitimately, with their work and at the cost of family distancing.

The majority of Cuban health personnel who accept such humiliating working and salary conditions and the permanent surveillance of State Security, do so to improve their material life and that of their families and not because of any political or ethical commitment to the most immoral of the revolutions. If anyone can attest to Cuba's disaster, it is its doctors and nurses.

Washington is right by keeping late Castroism on the blacklist of human traffickers and on the list ofsponsors of terrorism; as demonstrated by its migratory avalanche against the United States, the terror it applies against the health personnel it exports; neglecting the people he claims to represent and defend.

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opinion article: The statements and opinions expressed in this article are the exclusive responsibility of its author and do not necessarily represent the point of view of CiberCuba.

Carlos Cabrera Pérez

CiberCuba journalist. He has worked at Granma Internacional, Prensa Latina, IPS and EFE agencies correspondents in Havana. Director Tierras del Duero and Sierra Madrileña in Spain.


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