
Related videos:
The Spanish propagandist in the service of the Cuban regime, Ana Hurtado Martínez, recently revealed the news of her marriage to a mysterious figure who had been appearing in photos shared on Facebook since April 2024.
“Until death do us part. This Revolution gave me the best gift of my life up to this moment. ‘A true Cuban, who gives his life for his land. He lives openly and upright, ready for combat, and clings to his flag.’ Thank you, Cuba,” said the Spanish woman on April 8 in the post where she announced her marriage, quoting the song “Me dicen Cuba” by revolutionary trumpeter Alexander Abreu.
But nothing was said about the identity of the "fortunate" husband, nor the date on which the marriage was formalized. Anita left a photo dressed in white alongside her partner, a gray-haired man also dressed in a white guayabera, both seated before the notary who officiated the "I do" of a communist who still carries the Catholic liturgy of her homeland and makes vows of unity until fate intervenes.
“Hey! Declassification of historical events,” commented her dear friend, teacher, and fellow activist, Marxlenin Valdés, an academic, communicator, and wife of Fidel Antonio Castro Smirnov, grandson of who knows who.
The comment indicates that the wedding party took place some time ago; it is now a "historical fact," something corroborated by the diplomat and close friend of the bride, Tania Causse, who defines herself on her social media as "communist, Vanvan fan, industrialist, and fidelist in all my past lives, the current one, and those to come"... in other words, a Leninist believer in reincarnation.
Living a kind of "political asylum" in Cuba since October 2022, the firebrand of the farm has found "a true Cuban." Well, she didn't find him; like every well-trained disciple, the little husband was provided (no accent, Anita, please) by the “revolution.”
Evading Spanish justice, which convicted her following lawsuits filed by the Cuban-Spanish activist doctor, Lucio Enríquez Nodarse, Hurtado Martínez has found paradise in the post-communist Cuba of these times, governed by a puppet who claims to be the leader of a movement called "continuity," manipulated by the Castro family and the Business Administration Group S.A. (GAESA).
That Cuba, filled with empty hotels and crumbling hospitals, where marinas thrive while public health declines, where delicacies and Swedish tables abound as the ration book disappears; that archipelago with cays of white sands where paid pamphleteers seek inspiration to then sing the victories of the “revolution,” its sense of equality and social justice, its universal health care and education, and other mysteries revealed with rum at the edge of turquoise waters, or by inhaling the salt air from a yacht or catamaran.
In that idyllic Cuba, the resident of Ubetense quenches her thirst, traveling from San Antonio to Maisí, visiting all the guest houses, hotels, and facilities of the regime's military and oligarchs, getting to know the island better than the Cubans themselves, immersing herself in its spirituality with the help of Díaz-Canel's godmother, slaying scoundrels and righting wrongs with her just pen in the service of Cubadebate. And in that Cuba, she found the ring, like El Lebrijano under the bridge.
¿And who is he?, what would Perales say? According to Cubanos por el Mundo, the lucky one would be Colonel (perhaps more, or perhaps less) Senén Casas, son of the late General Senén Casas Regueiro, who was the right-hand man of Raúl Castro, First Deputy Minister of the Armed Forces, Chief of the General Staff, and Minister of Transportation until his death in 1996 from a myocardial infarction, six months after the downing of the Brothers to the Rescue planes and the death of four civilian pilots.
A Casas Regueiro was known "for his loyalty to the revolutionary cause," meaning to the Castro family. A soldier in the Sierra, he returned with the rank of captain and achieved the highest positions and honors within the nomenclature of the "revolutionary power." It is said that his son grew up close to the minister's family and was a childhood friend of Alejandro Castro Espín, the son of Raúl and one of the most powerful figures within the totalitarian regime.
In fact, rumors that circulated in August 2012 pointed to Senén Casas (son) as the personal aide to Colonel Castro Espín, holding the rank of lieutenant colonel. At that time, it was said that he was detained in Villa Marista for collaborating with U.S. intelligence services, something that was clearly dismissed, but could have been related to the increasingly ambitious maneuvers of El Tuerto (Castro Espín) aimed at consolidating his dictatorial legacy.
So, if the assumptions made by Cubanos por el Mundo are correct, Anita caught a magnificent specimen on her Caribbean adventure, a "daddy's boy" of the elite, an "aristocrat" of the regime, born into a "noble" family, surrounded by privileges and directly connected to the Castro family. And according to that media outlet, it seems that both of them were in the process of legalizing their marriage at the Spanish Consulate in the middle of last year.
The “motherland” has stunk of Castroism for years, but signs like these, including the arrival in Madrid of the offspring of Lis Cuesta Peraza and advisor to Díaz-Canel, alongside the star of La Colmenita (the other Anita, the “de Armas”), plus lawyers and front men of the regime, are turning Spain into a refuge for corrupt individuals and criminals of chavismo and Castroism, dedicated to money laundering, corruption, and a lavish lifestyle.
Linked to that power matrix, Anita is now a plush toy accepted in circles close to the Castro family, the "cheburashka" of Senencito, the ambia of the ex-spy Gerardo Hernández Nordelo and the grandchildren of José Luis Tassende de las Muñecas, another close friend of Raúl.
“Power is only given to those who dare to take it”, said Hurtado Martínez at the end of May 2023. And she took it to heart, step by step, knowing that the regime needed her in its new battlefield, social media.
Since she coined her slogan "the worm infestation" in 2022 until the spring marriage of 2024, the Spanish woman has demonstrated her tenacity, that will to power that has made her the happy wife of an heir to the insular chieftaincy.
It's a pity that intellect does not accompany such a notable effort to shine in the "paradise" of the dictatorship and its dim society. If Anita had been endowed with the ability to reflect, she would have revisited her message about her marital status and would have seen the contradiction within the terms.
“Until death do us part” means “until the end of life”. However, “this Revolution gave me the best gift of my life so far” means what it means: “so far”.
Does Anita expect to receive better gifts from the "revolution"? Better even than eternal love?
Filed under: