Cuba says United States, Facebook helping to foment Nov. 15 protests
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[November 11, 2021] By
Dave Sherwood and Nelson Acosta
HAVANA (Reuters) - Cuba's foreign minister
on Wednesday said the United States was behind protests over human and
civil rights planned for Nov. 15 in the communist-run country, and
alleged U.S.-based social media platform Facebook was helping to promote
them.
Dissidents on the island, organized under a Facebook group called
Archipielago, in September requested permission to conduct the rallies.
Cuban authorities denied their request, alleging protesters were working
with the United States to overthrow the government.
Foreign Minister Bruno Rodriguez reiterated those allegations before a
meeting of foreign diplomats in Havana, saying the United States had
helped to underwrite and organize the protests in a bid to destabilize
the government.
"U.S. policy...is doomed to failure. It is unfeasible. It hasn't worked
for 60 years. It does not work now (...) and it will not work in the
future," he said.
Rodriguez specifically called out the role of Facebook, saying
dissidents organized in groups on the platform had violated the social
media platform's own policies, "altering logarithms, altering the
geolocation mechanism to simulate the massive presence in Cuba of people
with accounts that are known to reside outside our country, primarily in
Florida and in the U.S. territory."
Rodriguez said these practices violated both U.S. and international law.
"As has already happened, Facebook could perfectly be, with strict
adherence to the laws, sued for these practices against Cuba."
Neither the U.S. State Department nor Facebook, which recently changed
its company name to Meta, immediately responded to a Reuters request for
comment.
The recent expansion of web access in Cuba has given new ways for people
to share criticisms and mobilize online.
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Cuba's Foreign Minister
Bruno Rodriguez Parilla speaks during a news conference in Havana,
Cuba, July 13, 2021. Ismael Francisco/Pool via REUTERS/File Photo
The Facebook group behind the protests, Archipielago, says it has 31,501
members, more than half of which it says reside in Cuba.
Cuban dissident leader Yunior Garcia, of Archilpielago, could not be immediately
reached for comment.
Cuba's government has a monopoly on telecommunications, and regularly blames
trolls and foreign agents on social media for stirring unrest.
The island nation suffered disruptions in access to internet and social media
following large anti-government rallies in July, in an apparent bid to dampen
further calls to protest .
Rodriguez also told diplomats that the United States last week had offered Cuba
one million doses of vaccine against coronavirus. He criticized the offer as
"opportunistic" and irrelevant, given that Cuba has already vaccinated nearly
its entire population with home-grown drugs.
Instead, he made a counter-offer, suggesting that Cuba and the United States
each offer a donation of their respective vaccines to a country more in need of
them.
(Reporting by Dave Sherwood and Nelson Acosta, additional reporting by Elizabeth
Culliford in New York, Editing by Nick Zieminski and Alistair Bell)
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