Fidel
Soldado de las Ideas
Decree-Law 35 regulates telecommunications in Cuba, prohibits the dissemination of false news, incitement to violence and instigation to hatred, but does not prevent freedom of expression on the Internet, a specialist emphasized today.
In statements to Prensa Latina, constitutional law professor Yuliesky Amador explained that the objective of the new regulation has been distorted by the same people who use social media for subversion campaigns against the island's government.
Mexicans and Cuban residents are carrying out today a voluntary work to pack gloves, masks, numerous medicines including antibiotics, and other supplies required for the protection of doctors attending Covid-19 cases.
In declarations to Prensa Latina, the leader of the Promotora de Solidaridad Va por Cuba, Irina Layevska, said that from early in the morning groups of people mobilized towards Carlos Pereyra Avenue in the Viaducto Piedad neighborhood, in the Iztacalco district, to help in the task of arranging the load with the donations collected in just a few days.
President Miguel Diaz-Canel ratified on Sunday that Haiti will always be able to count on Cuba, and conveyed his solidarity for that people who is carrying out rescue works after a recent earthquake.
On his official Twitter account, the president wrote that 'in these hard times, as in others for many years, our health personnel are saving lives there.'
In the same way, he stressed that the more than 200 collaborators from the Cuban Medical Brigade on Haitian territory are doing well and helping as much as possible.
Dominican poet and writer Rafael Nino Féliz published today an article in Acento newspaper, in which he wonders what Cuba would have been without the economic blockade imposed by the United States.
In the text, Nino refers to a series of statistical data so that 'the reader draws his own conclusions, regardless of the opinion of each one about a reality that draws so much attention to the whole world'.
Revolutionaries worldwide are celebrating this Friday, the 95th anniversary of the birth of the historic leader of the Cuban Revolution, Fidel Castro, a universal symbol of emancipatory ideas and the anti-colonialist and anti-imperialist struggle.
Fidel is a reference of Marxist thought and its creative application in Cuba, a nation that, despite being small and poor, became a torch in the dark shadow of the empire.
Fidel Castro ne fut pas seulement un rénovateur permanent des méthodes de la lutte révolutionnaire, mais aussi un rêveur qui eut la chance de voir les plus belles utopies se réaliser.
In Cuba in the summer of 1994, Cuba’s economic panorama was dire, following the disappearance of trade with the Soviet Union, which eliminated the source of more than 70% of the country's foreign currency income: power outages lasted more than 12 hours, a dwindling food supply turned a phrase from a popular soap opera, "Hey girl, say hello to your boyfriend," into a synonym for rice and beans, the most frequently available dish, along with other Creole inventions such as soy meat and goose paste, while access to the few cafes that sold hamburgers was organized by neighbo
Interrupting the solemnity of the moment, like a wave gaining strength, the clamor rose and little by little the Plaza de la Revolución became a single voice chanting: I am Fidel. It was Tuesday, November 29, 2016 and the people of Havana, representing all of Cuba, had gathered there to pay tribute to our undefeated Comandante who had departed to immortality.
President Miguel Diaz-Canel today underscored Cuba's commitment to its youth in the effort to build the nation's future.
Commenting on Twitter about a meeting held the day before with a hundred young people from different sectors at the Cadenas Square of the University of Havana (UH), the Cuban leader said: 'When we talk to you, one feels very sure that we will have a better country as soon as possible'.
Cuban Foreign Minister Bruno Rodríguez on Thursday described attacks on those who defend the re-establishment of US-Cuba relations as unacceptable.
On Twitter, the Cuban foreign minister posted that 'harassment, racist and homophobic foul language at US citizens who support the ¨Let Cuba Live¨ request should embarrass alleged human rights defenders in the United States and Europe'.
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