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US blacklists Cuban inside ministry over alleged human rights abuses

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The United States slapped sanctions on Cuba’s inside ministry on Friday, accusing it of great human rights abuses as Washington saved up sanctions into the ultimate days of President Donald Trump’s administration.
In a press release, the US Treasury Department talked about Cuban dissident Jose Daniel Ferrer, saying he had been detained in a jail managed by the ministry and was reportedly overwhelmed and tortured.

“The United States will continue to use all the tools at its disposal to address the dire human rights situation in Cuba and elsewhere around the world,” Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin mentioned within the assertion.
Washington additionally blacklisted Cuban Interior Minister Lazaro Alberto Álvarez Casas.
Cuban Foreign Minister Bruno Rodriguez on Twitter denounced the Trump administration’s transfer as “a coercive measure against our country.”
“The willful determination to single out Cuba comes from a regime that is leaving a legacy of isolation and defeat in foreign policy,” he wrote.

Trump reversed his predecessor Barack Obama’s diplomatic opening to Havana, tightened restrictions on U.S. journey and remittances to Cuba and imposed sanctions on shipments of Venezuelan oil to the Caribbean island.
Trump’s coverage was in style among the many massive Cuban-American inhabitants in South Florida, serving to him win the state within the November election although he misplaced the nationwide vote to Joe Biden, who was Obama’s vp.
Biden, who will take workplace on Jan. 20, mentioned throughout the marketing campaign he would promptly reverse Trump insurance policies that he mentioned have harmed Cubans and “done nothing to advance democracy and human rights”.

The Trump administration introduced on Monday it was returning Cuba to the U.S. checklist of state sponsors of terrorism, a transfer that might complicate any efforts by Biden to revive Obama-era detente with Havana.
The administration famous Cuba had hosted Colombia’s peace talks with rebels and mentioned it was harboring guerilla leaders that the Colombian authorities now needed returned.
Norway’s overseas ministry, co-mediator of these talks, criticized the U.S. transfer, saying inserting a rustic on a terrorism checklist for internet hosting peace talks “could set a negative precedent for international peace efforts”.