OFFICIAL VOICE OF THE COMMUNIST PARTY OF CUBA CENTRAL COMMITTEE
Photo: Illustrative 

Human rights must be the arguments that the U.S. Government wields with more hypocrisy and cynicism against countries that do not yield to the blackmail of imperial interests.
In order to attack those peoples, it would seem that the ideologues of the White House dig into the entrails of their own society, take out a piece of the cancer that eats it from inside, and from that violation that is most serious and repulsive, they take a copy and describe it in foreign scenarios, with the audacity to blame others.
They have done it again against Cuba, according to the so-called Report on Human Rights 2022, a saga of slander against the island, which the member of the Political Bureau of the Party and Minister of Foreign Affairs, Bruno Rodriguez Parrilla, described as unacceptable.
"With the shameful record of violations and abuses to its own citizens, the U.S. should refrain from stigmatizing others," wrote on Twitter the Foreign Minister, who added that the leadership in Washington "tries in vain to disguise its interventionist and interferenceist behavior."
The U.S. report alludes to the fact that in Cuba, the courts have handed down draconian prison sentences to hundreds of people for protesting for their rights; however, paradoxically, the assessments made by the United Nations in 2022, explain that the United States continues to fail to fulfill its commitments on human rights, especially in the area of racial justice, and this is reflected in the country's inability to end the systemic racism linked to the legacies of slavery.
What lessons can the nation that continues to record the highest criminal incarceration rates in the world, with nearly two million people held in state and federal jails and prisons on any given day, according to data cited by Prensa Latina news agency?
What can the country in which half of all police departments refuse to report on the use of force, necessitating the collection and analysis of non-governmental data, demand; even knowing that in 2022 alone, U.S. police killed more than 400 people, of which the black people tripled the number of dead people compared to white peopple?
Translaed by ESTI