Category Archives: Cuba Caricom

Cuban medical brigades have collaborated in several of the Caribbean islands, as in the case of COVID-19.
Cuban medical brigades have collaborated in several of the Caribbean islands, as in the case of COVID-19. Photo: Ricardo López Hevia

Among the most important dates that the Caribbean celebrates is December 8. Just 51 years ago, four independent states of the region: Barbados, Guyana, Jamaica and Trinidad and Tobago sovereignly decided to establish diplomatic relations with Cuba.

This was a break with the diplomatic isolation imposed on our country by the U.S. Government, with the complicity of the OAS.

The Caribbean Community (Caricom), a sub-regional organization with which Cuba maintains the closest and most fruitful relations, has provided permanent support in all international forums and maintains its firm opposition to the economic blockade imposed by the U.S. administration against the island.

The presence of Cuban collaborators in health and other areas of social interest has been and continues to be a proof of true South-South collaboration.

Cuba has been an important support for the development efforts of the insular Caribbean for four decades now, and this is recognized by the leaders and the peoples. The permanence, in those countries, of Cuban medical brigades that have taken health to the most unsuspected places in the area; the immediate response of our nation to some climatic inclemency that has affected those nations, and the training of human resources -mainly in the health area- in Cuban schools, plus the significant contributions of the well-known Miracle Mission, which cured the eyesight of tens of thousands of citizens, are some examples that today have become a necessary reference when talking about solidarity.

Every December 8, therefore, we celebrate a date that has set a course of solidarity, unity and mutual respect that must be preserved.

At the Second Cuba-Caricom Summit, held in Barbados in 2005, Fidel warned: “We must respond to neoliberal and selfish globalization, to the anti-democratic international political and economic order, with unity and the globalization of solidarity, and the promotion of dialogue, integration and genuine cooperation”.

At the same Summit, the governments of the Caribbean Community conferred on the Commander-in-Chief the Honorary Order of that organization, in recognition of his impeccable human conduct and his unconditional support in favor of the progress and welfare of the area.

The Eighth CARICOM-Cuba celerated the 50th anniversary of the establishment of diplomatic relations

Brotherhood has a home in the Caribbean
The Eighth CARICOM-Cuba celerated the 50th anniversary of the establishment of diplomatic relations between the first four nations of that bloc and Cuba.

Author: International news staff | informacion@granma.cu

december 14, 2022 12:12:29


Díaz-Canel conveyed an embrace from Army General Raúl Castro Ruz, “admirer of the dignity of our Caribbean brothers and tireless defender of the relationship between our peoples and governments” to the Summit participants.

Photo: Estudios Revolución
The First Secretary of the Central Committee of the Party and President of the Republic, Miguel Díaz-Canel Bermúdez invoked more solidarity, more understanding, more cooperation and more unity among the Caribbean nations while speaking at the Eighth Caricom-Cuba Summit, held on Tuesday on the island of Barbados.
The event commemorated the 50th anniversary of the establishment of diplomatic relations between the first four nations of that bloc and the largest of the Antilles. In the opening session, the Cuban Head of State invited to reflect on the significance of “the achievements made in these years and how much more we can do for the welfare of our nations.”
“I bring you an embrace from Army General Raúl Castro Ruz, admirer of the dignity of our Caribbean brothers and tireless defender of the relationship between our peoples and governments,” he said.
He evoked Fidel’s contribution to the growing rapprochement of the region and expressed Cuba’s gratitude for their “unwavering” solidarity and friendship of the Caribbean.
The heads of state and government attending the Summit also accompanied President Díaz-Canel in a tribute to the 73 victims of the terrorist attack on a Cubana de Aviación plane in mid-flight, which took place in 1976, near the coast of Barbados.
At the tribute, the dignitaries in attendance agreed to commemorate Caricom-Cuba Anti-Terrorism Day every October 6 because as host Prime Minister Mia Amor Mottley said, “the memory of those victims must always inspire us to preserve our Caribbean as a Zone of Peace.”
“Cuba can only be on the list, if it existed, of the victims of terrorism,” said Díaz-Canel.
At the end of an emotional day, the president met with members of the medical brigade working on the island, Cuban residents and members of the diplomatic mission.
Translated by ESTI

Díaz-Canel meets Jamaican Prime Minister and President of Haiti

 

Díaz-Canel meets Jamaican Prime Minister and President of Haiti
Confirmed in both meetings was the excellent state of relations shared by these Caribbean neighbors

Author: Leticia Martínez Hernández | internet@granma.cu
july 6, 2018 14:07:05

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President Diaz-Canel with Jamaican Prime Minister Andrew Holness. Photo: Estudios Revolución
MONTEGO BAY.— The first activity undertaken by Cuba’s President here was his official welcome by Prime Minister Andrew Holness in the city’s Convention Center.

During the meeting, Holnees ─ who is now assuming the pro tempore presidency of Caricom – congratulated Díaz-Canel for his recent election as President of Cuba’s Councils of State and Ministers; thanked Cuba for its solidarity with other Caribbean nations; and in the name of all leaders in Jamaica for the Caricom Conference, said he was pleased by the visit.

Díaz-Canel thanked the Jamaican leader for the warm welcome and the hospitality shown the Cuban delegation, recalling the historical and human closeness shared by the two countries, beyond geography, reaffirming Cuba’s gratitude for the “brave and audacious” gesture made by Jamaica in 1972, along with Barbados, Guyana, and Trinidad and Tobago, to establish diplomatic relations with revolutionary Cuba, despite pressure from the United States.

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President Diaz-Canel with Haitian President Jovenel Moise. Photo: Estudios Revolución
Following this meeting, Díaz-Canel met with Haitian President Jovenel Moise ─ exiting pro tempore president of Caricom ─ to discuss collaborative projects underway in water distribution and airport modernization, as well as scholarships for Haitian students to attend Cuban universities.