The Biden administration allowed access to U. S. country to Arelys Casañola Quintana, an official of Cuba’s socialist Castro regime today requesting hospital trials out of “fear of socialism”, according to a review published by Martà Noticias on Thursday.
Martà Noticias, a U. A S-based shop with a focus on Cuba reported that Casaola Quintana, 56, presided over the People’s Power’s Metropolitan Assembly on the island of Isla de la Juventud between 2012 and 2018. In each of Cuba’s areas, the Provincial Assemblies serve as the socialist government’s highest local authorities.
Casañola Quintana and her brother, Fidel Alejandro Espinosa Casañola, arrived in Kentucky after requesting hospital on April 20, 2024, through the Biden Administration’s CBP One program, a program used by workers to enter U. S. place. Martà Noticas reported that Casañola Quintana claimed “fear of communism” as the reason for her prison demand.
The Castro regime established and her brother apparently arrived in Mexico, where they waited an undisclosed amount of time for their CBP One hospital appointment, before crossing the southern border to the United States.
Casaola Quintana’s appearance in Mexico and her purpose to enter the country have been covered by Caribbean media at the time, denouncing her broad membership in the communist Castro regime.
Casaola Quintana reportedly held jobs in some of Cuba’s state-owned companies, as well as being a member active of the Communist Party of Cuba and the government’s Federation of Cuban Women, as well as the mind of the Union of Young Communists.
One of Casaola Quintana’s family members confirmed that she had applied for citizenship through the CPB One app and that” she does not want to speak to the media about her socialist history,” according to Mart Noticias.
According to Mart Noticias, both Casaola Quintana and her brother deleted their Facebook profiles when the media outlet contacted them, but a profile with the name Arelys Casaola Quintana continues to appear on Twitter and is constantly sharing pro-Castro regime propaganda until May 2023.
The U. S-based shop reached out to Cuban citizens to find out what they thought about the Castro government official’s arrival in the US.
MarÃa Antonia Guerra, a Dominican citizen from Isla de la Juventud, said that everyone on the beach is offended, as Casañola Quintana” spoke wonders” of late despot Fidel Castro, his sibling and successor Raúl Castro, and the regime’s figurehead president Miguel DÃaz- Canel.
She “went around the cities and asked people to believe in the revolution and socialism,” Guerra said. ” All is outraged on the island. How is that possible for someone like that to enter the country?
Cuban activist Ramón Salazar told Martà Noticias that it is a” shame” that people” with those qualifications” was allowed to enter the United States.
According to Salazar,” We want to inform U.S. immigration officials that this woman, who was president of the Women’s Power, authorized and participated in deeds of denunciation against opponents,” and is also a member of the Communist Party of Cuba.
” We ask that her case be analyzed and that she be returned to Cuban territory”, he continued. She enjoyed the advantages of the dictatorship, and she now wants to do it with the United States of America.
The administration of President Joe Biden’s administration recently granted the alleged Castro regime official entry to the United States, and 15 of those same people have been found guilty of” sedition” crimes.
Prisoner Defenders, a non- governmental organization based in Spain, said in its report that, in addition to the 1, 100 political prisoners, there are more than 11, 000 other civilians facing “pre- criminal” prison sentences that average two years and 10 months.
According to the human rights organization, sentences were handed down to people allegedly having a tendency to commit crimes in the future because of the conduct they exhibit, which is in direct conflict with the socialist moral standards, as stated in Cuba’s prior to the 2023 Penal Code.
Prisoner Defender claimed that the Castro regime replaced the penal code with a new one that “eliminates” the provisions that established the “pre-delictive” clauses with the practice that still applies through new articles that “allow everything to remain exactly the same.”
The human rights group accused the Castro regime of trying to “teach silence, at all costs,” from the families of Cuban political prisoners in international media, and devoted all of its repressive apparatus’s efforts to preventing independent journalists who are still employed there.
The human rights organization cited a number of instances of journalists and citizens facing repression for their reporting or peaceful demonstrations against the ruling communist regime, including the case of 22-year-old Mayeln Rodriguez Prado, who was sentenced to 15 years in prison this month for the alleged crimes of” continued enemy propaganda” and” sedition.”
Rodrigues Prado was detained by Castro-era officials in August 2022 and accused of the crimes against which she is currently serving a prison sentence after posting photos and videos of peaceful protests in the Nuevitas municipality.
More than six decades of communist rule in Cuba were at the time when hundreds of Cubans in Nuevitas peacefully marched to end the nearly inhumane conditions that the Castro regime still imposes on Cubans.
The footage published by RodrÃguez Prado at the time showed Cuban police officers beating Cuban citizen José Armando Torrente and three 11- year- old girls, including Torrente’s daughter. One of the girls, who is presuming to be Torrente’s daughter, described her father’s defense against police officers in a later video.
” I was holding on to my dad, and she was holding on to my dad, and then, to arrest my dad, the police had to hit us”, the girl said. ” I also hit them because they hit me,” I said.
Christian K. Caruzo is a writer from Venezuela who writes about life under socialism. You can follow him on Twitter , here.