Cuba has lashed out at US President Donald Trump for reinstating the anti-Havana travel and economic restrictions eased by the former Washington administration, decrying the measure as a “return to the coercive methods of the past.”
"The government of
Cuba denounces the new measures toughening the embargo” imposed since
1962, said a statement read out on state television on Friday.
Earlier in the day, Trump said he was "cancelling the
last administration’s completely one-sided deal with Cuba” in yet
another attempt to roll back the legacy of his predecessor, Barack
Obama.
Obama spent two years to improve relations with Cuba.
In 2014, the then US head of state announced the reopening of the American embassy in Havana, which was shut down in 1961.
The
restoration of ties eased travel restrictions against Cuba, enabling
businesses, including the tourism and food industries, to engage in
commercial deals.
Obama also became the first sitting US president to pay a visit to the South American country in over 50 years.
However,
during a speech in Little Havana, a Miami neighborhood, the US president
said he would keep his campaign promise to reverse Obama’s policy of
engagement with Cuba.
Trump
slammed the ex-administration for turning a blind eye to what he called
Cuba’s rights violations and said "the previous administration’s easing
of restrictions of travel and trade does not help the Cuban people. They
only enrich the Cuban regime.”
The
policy changes announced were partial, but Trump tightened rules for
American nationals traveling to Cuba, banned ties with a military-run
tourism firm and reaffirmed the existing US trade embargo.
Reacting
to Trump’s move in the Friday statement, the government of Cuban
President Raul Castro decried the "hostile rhetoric that recalls the
time of open confrontation” and "return to the coercive methods of the
past.”
Cuba regretted "a
reversal in relations between the two countries,” the statement said.
"Any strategy to change the political, economic and social system in
Cuba, whether through pressure...or through more subtle methods, will be
doomed to failure.”
Havana, however, said it was willing to hold "respectful dialog” with Washington.
Venezuela, Bolivia back Cuba
Trump’s policy rollback also drew criticism from Venezuela, which is Cuba’s main ally in the region.
Venezuelan
President Nicolas Maduro, whose country has also been hit by harsh US
economic sanctions, denounced Trump for opening a "new cycle of
aggression” against Cuba.
Cuba "is not alone,” Maduro said. "We reject Donald Trump’s declarations against our brother Cuba. It is an offense against Latin America.”
The
Venezuelan leader further censured Trump’s speech as "threatening” and
"aggressive,” saying it exposed the US president’s "contempt” and
"ignorance.”
Venezuelan Foreign
Ministry Delcy Rodriguez also voiced solidarity with the Cuban nation
via regional blocs, including the ALBA group of leftist nations.
The
ALBA group, formally called the Bolivarian Alliance for the Peoples of
Our America, was founded during the friendship of late revolutionary
Venezuelan and Cuban leaders, Hugo Chavez and Fidel Castro, in 2004.
"US extremism aspires to cover the planet with misery, violence and death,” the top Venezuelan diplomat said on Twitter.
Bolivia’s
President Evo Morales also joined the chorus of condemnations and said
"it’s an abuse of power by the US empire not to listen to the whole
world's support against the blockade of Cuba.”
"Instead
of asking Cuba to free political prisoners, Trump should expel the
criminal politicians sheltered in the USA,” he added.