China and Russia rally behind Cuba as US indicts Raul Castro

Flags of China and Russia are displayed in this illustration picture taken March 24, 2022. PHOTO: REUTERS

China said it supported Cuba and urged the United States to “stop brandishing the judicial stick” against the country, after Washington indicted the Caribbean island’s former leader Raul Castro on murder charges.

The US charges against the 94-year-old former president — announced on Wednesday — fuelled speculation that President Donald Trump will try to topple the communist state.

“The US side should stop brandishing the sanctions stick and the judicial stick against Cuba and stop threatening force at every turn,” Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Guo Jiakun told a press briefing Thursday, when asked about the US charges.

“China firmly supports Cuba in safeguarding its national sovereignty and national dignity and opposes external interference,” Guo said.

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Russia also said on Thursday that it would provide active support ​to Cuba despite attempts by the United ‌States to intimidate and tighten the “sanctions noose” around the Communist‑run island republic, Reuters reported.

“We will continue to provide the most active support to ​the fraternal Cuban people during this extremely ​difficult period,” Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova told ‌reporters.

“We ⁠reaffirm our full solidarity with Cuba and strongly condemn any attempts at gross interference in the internal affairs of a ​sovereign state, intimidation, ​and ⁠the use of illegal unilateral restrictive measures, threats, and blackmail.”

Zakharova gave ​no details of the support that ​Russia ⁠would provide but said the United States was showing its “intolerance towards any form of ⁠dissent ​and a cynical embodiment ​of the revived Monroe Doctrine.”

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Castro is the younger brother of Fidel Castro, the late influential US nemesis who led Cuba’s 1959 communist revolution.

The charges against him stem from the downing of two civilian planes manned by anti-Castro pilots in 1996, which resulted in four deaths.

Raul Castro was also charged with conspiracy to kill Americans and destruction of aircraft.

Trump hailed the indictment on Wednesday as a “very big moment” but played down prospects of moving on Cuba, whose economy has been in a deepening crisis for months, driven by a US oil blockade.

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