Cubainformación.- Cuba is a country that cannot make even the smallest international transfer, not even to buy food, and of course, cannot obtain even the smallest loan from international banks, because it is on a "list of state sponsors of terrorism" compiled by the U.S. State Department. This is a fallacy, a fabrication, a lie, based on no proof, evidence, or testimony. It is based solely on the White House's interest in subjecting certain nations to maximum economic pressure, to the most brutal suffocation, so that they will ultimately overthrow governments that are inconvenient for Washington. However, do you know which president was just received at the White House and which country had all sanctions lifted?
This is Ahmad al-Sharaa—formerly known as Abu Muhammad al-Jolani— the de facto (by force) president of Syria and former leader of al-Qaeda's Syrian branch: "I like him; he's had a difficult past," said Trump as he shook hands with the now-partner and puppet of the West. Not so long ago, al-Jolani was wanted as a terrorist in the US, and there was a $10 million bounty on his head. Is it possible to be more cynical, more politically rotten, more hypocritical? Which country harbors and protects terrorism? It's clear: the US!
We will also talk about the US military threats against Venezuela and the current scenario of naval operations in the Caribbean; about another mercenary (in this case born in Cuba) received in the US, José Daniel Ferrer, the sexist aggressor and "dissident" paid for years with US federal money and who, at the request of Marco Rubio, was released from prison by Cuba in exchange for his exile in the US.
And at the end of the program, we will make an urgent appeal for humanitarian aid to Cuba, through donations to all the accounts set up for this purpose at various organizations around the world. For details, please consult the Agenda section of our website www.cubainformacion.tv .
As of today, the following figures are available: 2.2 million people severely impacted; 60,000 homes, 461 medical centers, and 1,552 schools damaged; 78,700 hectares of crops destroyed; and extensive damage to telephone, electricity, and water networks. Nearly two weeks later, in areas like Santiago de Cuba, electricity service has not yet been restored to even a third of its capacity. In any case, and thanks to the Cuban Civil Defense system, there have been zero fatalities.