Alfredo González, a Cuban father who lost his son while doing his Military Service, exposed the abuses that were committed against the young man that led to his suicide.
Your sonAnnier was barely 18 years old when on July 4, 2021 he took his own life with the rifle they gave him to serve as guard at the Combinado del Sur prison, in Matanzas.
This courageous father shared a video in the groupFacebook "No more deaths in military service in Cuba", in which he denounces the irregularities that occurred and the lack of interest of the Ministry of the Interior and the Prosecutor's Office in investigating the tragic event.
"I went to all the institutions after my son's death and no one was doing anything, one by one from here in the province, and I went to see each chief in each place," he explained.
Alfredo reported that after three years of complaints, a file of an alleged MININT investigation has now appeared in the Prosecutor's Office, which is full of inaccuracies and lies.
"They did it that way sloppily, just to do it, and it was over," he stressed.
The man referred to the abuse committed by the officers against his son during the prior period, and pointed out that the response they gave him was that everything that happened was authorized.
"Where is the law that says they are authorized to abuse any boy and do what they did to him?" he questioned.
"The psychologists say that my son had a psychopathological problem adapting to Military Service. Do you believe that my son could adapt to Military Service with everything that was done to him? I don't think so. So now the person responsible is my son, when the Those responsible are the Ministry of the Interior, those institutions that today have the pleasure of saying that the law must be complied with," he added.
González shared another video days ago in which he exposed the arbitrariness suffered by him in the recruitment process and in the medical check-up and other abuses.
Last February, in front of Anier's grave, GonzalezHe swore that he would not tire of seeking justice for him., and warned that if he does not get a response he will take to the streets.
"Here I am, like every Sunday, at my son's grave," he said, visibly distressed and containing the desire to cry.
Many times this father dedicates texts to the young man, in which he regrets not having taken him out of Military Service.
"Forgive me, my child, for not realizing that I had to get you out of that place. of mediocre officers who should take care of you and not mistreat you, but unfortunately we live in Cuba, where justice does not exist. Wherever you are, EPD," he wrote last August.
This man's life became hell after losing his son when he was just beginning to live. "Two years since I lost my child in that misfortune of Military Service. It is hard, hard to get up every day and see that empty bed," he said a month before.
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