“It is critical that we lend our support to the Cuban people and condemn the immoral tightening of the restrictions on trade during a public health crisis caused by COVID-19. We have to raise our voices even louder to demand an end to the blockade, which has worsened the suffering of Cubans. We must also insist that there is no U.S. intervention and that Cuban sovereignty is respected as the people determine the direction of their country and address the contradictions to move to a more just society,”
—Ajamu Dillahunt, GGJ member, Black Workers for Justice
GGJ stands with the people of Cuba and peoples around the world demanding an immediate end to these inhumane and crushing sanctions, imposed by the U.S. over the past 60 years. Cuba, an island of 11 million people, is currently reeling from food insecurity, power outages, and a shortage of medicines during a searing pandemic―a direct result of U.S. sanctions that have blocked access to
essential supplies like fuel and food. We condemn manipulative efforts by the U.S. that uses this pandemic moment as an opportunity to destabilize Cuba and justify more intervention. As grassroots movements in the U.S., we have decades of deep solidarity with social movements and the people in Cuba, building relationships of mutual aid and learning around the complexities and tremendous achievements of the ongoing socialist project. This includes the incredible success of Cuba’s COVID-19 vaccines and healthcare efforts in their own country and beyond―offering solidarity across the Americas and the world. As part of this process, we strongly uphold the self-determination of Cuban people to hold their own government accountable on their own terms and to continue to pave the way for their social experiment, without intervention from the U.S. or other imperialist forces.As grassroots feminists, we know that the debilitating sanctions imposed on Cuba and tightened under Trump have criminally and devastatingly directed harm on the material and lived realities of children,
caregivers, and communities. The U.S. embargo against Cuba is among the longest in modern history. Each year since 1992, the United Nations General Assembly has passed a resolution to end this inhumane economic blockade, with Israel and the U.S. repeatedly thwarting this resolution. A 2018 UN report revealed that the unjust U.S. trade and financial embargo had cost the Cuban people nearly $130 billion, leaving an “indelible mark on its economic structure.” While the Obama administration tried to ease some restrictions, Trump instituted over 200 measures,
intensifying the suffering of Cubans. Meanwhile, Biden has imposed new sanctions on Cuban officials despite his campaign promise to lift them. “Cuba has been under a state of war for over 60 years. The belligerence has been one-sided, however; for it is the U.S. that is at war with Cuba, a small island nation of 11 million, not Cuba with the U.S. The U.S. is obsessed with Cuba and will not let her live in peace. Why? For daring to break free of its neocolonial shackles and assert its independence, sovereignty, and self determination. Thirteen American presidents have waged a nasty multifaceted war against this country which puts the social welfare of its people first. Each of these presidents has failed to
break the will of the Cuban people. Cuba does not present a military nor an economic threat to the U.S., but a moral one, for Cuba demonstrates by example that another way of living is possible. Let Cuba live. End the blockade,” shared Jovanni Reyes of About Face: Veterans Against the War.It is time to forge a new path with U.S.-Cuba relations―one that promotes human rights and peace, and respects the self-determination of Cubans. GGJ joins the global call of more than 400 former politicians, artists, and scholars urging Biden to ‘Let Cuba
Live!’ and lift “the 243 unilateral sanctions imposed on Cuba during the administration of Donald Trump, which have greatly aggravated the economic situation on the island.” COVID-19 has revealed just how deeply interconnected we are. We must transform our foreign policy from an imperialist ideology and move towards one that centers justice, human rights, and planetary wellbeing.
Additional Resources:Interview with Gina Alfonso González, Director of the Instituto de Filosofía de Cuba
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