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El Yonki reacts to the protests in Cuba: "No more violence, no more hunger"

"Anywhere in the world I proudly show off my flag and having been born in Cuba, but what does sadden me is the suffering of my people," said the reggaeton singer.

El Yonki exige no a la violencia y libertad para Cuba © Instagram / El Yonki y Facebook / Rompiendo Cadenas
El Yonki demands no to violence and freedom for Cuba Photo © Instagram / El Yonki and Facebook / Breaking Chains

From Miami, The Yankees joined the claim through social networks the Cubans who took to the streets this March 17 to protest the lack of food and electricity shouting for freedom and “Homeland and Life.”

No more violence, no more hunger. Cuba deserves freedom. It is enough that they treat us like animals without water, without electricity, without anything, you cannot live like that,” El Yonki shared in a post on Instagram.

Along with a photo with a Cuban flag on his shoulders, the Cuban reggaeton singer wrote a long text reflecting his position regarding the situation in Cuba.

“In any part of the world I proudly show off my flag and having been born in Cuba, but What does sadden me is the suffering of my people", the violence and pain of an entire country that only needs to live as people, equal rights and freedom, with hunger it is not possible, with thirst neither and without freedom it is not possible to live... Long live Cuba Libre", stated El Yonki in his post.

The singer assured that his words are with a lot of feeling: "I do have my entire family in Cuba, my neighbors who saw me grow up and my friends, and all the times that I have participated in demonstrations I have done so consciously, not because no one tell me what I have to do, and taking the risk because I do have to return to Cuba because I have my mother fighting to survive a very delicate illness and I'm going to take risks as many times as necessary because I'm from Cuba. and I love my land but I am not blind.”

Like El Junki several Cuban artists in exile supported the people Santiago and Bayamese for the courage to go out to protest against a government that does not provide them with the most basic and elementary needs.

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Deneb González

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