Cuba, Venezuela
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2don MSN
Cuba launches mass demonstration to decry US attack on Venezuela and demand Maduro’s release
HAVANA (AP) — Tens of thousands of Cubans demonstrated Friday outside the U.S. Embassy in Havana to decry the killing of 32 Cuban officers in Venezuela and demand that the U.S. government release former Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro.
Tens of thousands gathered Friday in front of the U.S. Embassy in Havana to protest the deaths of Cuban officers killed during the U.S. operation that captured Venezuelan President Nicolás
Alina Bárbara López Hernández, a Cuban historian and activist, has raised concerns over whether the government has suspended constitutional rights
Just The News on MSN
Thousands protest outside US embassy in Havana over deaths of Cuban officers during Maduro operation
Venezuelan and Cuban officials reported that dozens of officers and personnel were killed in the operation, including 32 Cuban military and police officers working in Venezuela.
In Havana, tens of thousands of Cubans protested outside the US Embassy against the killing of 32 Cuban officers in Venezuela and demanded the release of ex-President Nicolás Maduro. The Cuban government organized the rally amidst rising US-Cuba tensions,
7don MSNOpinion
Now is the time to seriously consider giving Cuba’s communist thugs a final shove into the dustbin of history
But as Secretary of State Marco Rubio has hinted — musing that he would be “concerned” if he “lived in Havana” and “was in the government” there — the time has come to give Cuba’s communist thugs a final shove into the dustbin of history.
3don MSNOpinion
The Cuban people’s resilience is a strength but also a trap
Cutting off Venezuela’s vital oil surely will make Cubans more miserable, but they’ll figure out a way to deal with the coming belt-tightening without pulling down the government the way Washington envisions.
The grainy and often shaky cellphone videos, posted on social media, paint part of the picture of what's going on inside of Cuba. This past week, large crowds gathered in several cities to protest a dwindling supply of food and fuel, on an island where ...
HAVANA - Cuban President Miguel Díaz-Canel for the first time is offering some self-criticism while saying that government shortcomings in handling shortages and other problems played a role in this week's protests. But in a televised address Wednesday ...