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Exporting Doctors

Re: ReThe Brazilian “National Federation of Physicians”, has said, “th: Exporting Doc

New York Times Wants Amnesty for Illegal Immigrants, Unless They’re Cuban Doctors Fleeing Communism
New York Times Wants Amnesty for Illegal Immigrants, Unless They're Cuban Doctors Fleeing Communism - Washington Free Beacon

BY: Andrew Stiles
November 17, 2014

The New York Times editorial board supports comprehensive immigration reform that would give millions of illegal immigrants a path to citizenship. In the meantime, the Times’ editors want President Obama to take “big and bold” action on his own that would effectively legalize millions of unauthorized immigrants.

But while the Times does not appear to have a problem with illegal immigration, its editors have found at least one form of legal immigration they want to stop. In an editorial published on Sunday, the board lamented the “Cuban brain drain” brought on by U.S. immigration policy. Specifically, they want to do away with a program allowing highly trained Cuban doctors to defect to the United States while serving on medical missions abroad:

There is much to criticize about Washington’s failed policies toward Cuba and the embargo it has imposed on the island for decades. But the Cuban Medical Professional Parole Program, which in the last fiscal year enabled 1,278 Cubans to defect while on overseas assignments, a record number, is particularly hard to justify.
Click link above for full article.
You can bet on the New York Times to share the cruel and immoral position of the left, while embellishing the story with self-righteous hot air.
 
Re: ReThe Brazilian “National Federation of Physicians”, has said, “th: Exporting Doc

The New York Times push the notion that the way to value the work of Cuban doctors is by preventing them to escape from the Castroit tyrannical regime looking for a better future in a free country. No wonder that The New York Times circulation keeps decreasing and it is in a bad financial situation.
 
Re: ReThe Brazilian “National Federation of Physicians”, has said, “th: Exporting Doc

Exiled Cuban Doctor: “I Couldn’t Afford an Egg a Day”
Exiled Cuban Doctor: "I Couldn't Afford an Egg a Day"

US$18 Monthly Salary Left Juan Afonso No Choice but to Leave
Belén Marty October 15, 2015 at 11:43 am

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Doctor Afonso says Cuba offers two types of health care: one for ordinary citizens, and one for the ruling class. (Burbuja)

Juan Afonso is a Cuban-born physician. He lived, studied, and worked in Cuba under the communist health-care system. But far from the praise that uninformed observers heap on Cuba’s medical care, Afonso says the reality is much different. He fled Cuba for Chile in the 1990s, and says he could hardly afford to feed himself on his monthly salary on the island.

He speaks with a split accent, a perfect mix of Chilean Spanish and Cuban slang, after living in the Andean country for over 20 years. Some 280 kilometers away from the Chilean capital of Santiago is Talca, where Afonso currently lives and has established a private practice, on top of his shifts at a primary-care emergency room.

Prior to arriving in Chile, Afonso took part in a state-sponsored mission in Laos, and says he dreamed of the day the regime would allow him to buy a car. He confesses that the thought of escaping on raft heading toward Miami entered his mind more than once.
The best health care system is in Cuba: for the coma-andante and his family, the second best: for the PCC politburo, the third best: for foreigners, the 4th for members of the repressive apparatus, the armed forces, the PCC central committee, the council of ministries, the national assembly members, and similar cadres. Then, whatever is left, is for the regular Cubans.
 
Re: ReThe Brazilian “National Federation of Physicians”, has said, “th: Exporting Doc

One of the most readily apparent problems with the health care system in Cuba is the severe shortage of medicines, equipment, and other supplies. This problem is by no means limited to the health sector. Cubans often have tremendous difficulty obtaining basic consumer goods and other necessities, including food.
 
Re: ReThe Brazilian “National Federation of Physicians”, has said, “th: Exporting Doc

Not a penny for fighting Ebola
Not a penny for fighting Ebola | Diario de Cuba

Pablo Pascual Méndez Piña | La Habana | 23 Oct 2015 - 11:10 am.

The Cuban medical personnel who fought Ebola have not received the cars, homes or payments promised them by the regime, while those tapped for honors are still waiting for their medals.

The Cuban medical personnel who fought Ebola have not received the cars, homes or payments promised them by the regime, while those tapped for honors are still waiting for their medals.

Death and burial far from their homes and families was the risk run by the Cuban health personnel who traveled to Africa to help stamp out the Ebola epidemic. If they returned safe and sound they were to receive a car and a house from the State, and full payment from the World Health Organization (WHO) for services rendered.

But, according to one of those who was deployed, who spoke under the condition of strict anonymity, to date they have not received a car, a house, or one penny from the WHO (pay due estimated at 8,000 -10,000 dollars/month). And neither have the 248 medical professionals promised the Carlos J. Finlay Prize been decorated, due to the absence of medals.

The only money they had during their dangerous missions in Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone, says the source, came from their own savings, aside from their daily expense allowance "provided by the UN," consisting of 70-100 dollars. This money was distributed by the económico (a medical brigade member who functioned as an administrator), in accordance with the regions in which they worked.
Click the link above for the full article.
This reveal the real attitude of the Castroit regime towards the Cuban people. It is a mafia clan headed by Castro Inc. that use the people for its own economic benefit. According to the article two member of the medical brigade died in Africa and two in Cuba after contracting ebola.

Castro Inc. is exploiting the health professionals the same way its exploit the Cubans workers that get paid in hard currency, which get paid less than 10% of it while the regime pockets the rest. It is a mayor racket and those organizations known it, but except for the victims mostly nobody care.
 
Re: ReThe Brazilian “National Federation of Physicians”, has said, “th: Exporting Doc

Opinion: In Cuba the main form of 'birth control' is abortion, a sign spiritual poverty
Opinion: In Cuba the main form of 'birth control' is abortion, a sign spiritual poverty | Fox News Latino

By Dr. Grazie Pozo Christie
Published November 02, 2015

Fox News Latino

As a radiologist in Miami, working mainly with a lower income population, many of my female ultrasound patients are young women recently arrived from Cuba. It breaks my heart to meet these wonderful women with slightly tortured yet musical names starting with Y, such as Yunisleidys or Yosvaneisis. They have frightening termination histories. Some with over five or six abortions other with as many as 11 or 12.

This, to me, is not just a number, or the evidence of abundant “choice” and women’s liberation in Cuba. It is a sign of material, social, and spiritual poverty. Poverties that are willfully imposed on these women from above, by an oppressive patriarchy. The New York Times, interestingly, doesn't see the connection.

In a recent article , the newspaper describes a demographic nightmare taking place on the little island nation. Watchers of the Pope’s outdoor masses may have noticed the dearth of children in the crowds. The fact is, women in Cuba have almost entirely ceased to give birth. In about 50 years, experts predict that over 40 percent of Cubans will be over 60.
Cuba's infant mortality rate is kept low by the regime’s tampering with statistics, by a low birth rate of 12.5 births per 1000 population, and by a staggering abortion rate of 77.7 abortions per 1,000 women (0.78 abortions per each live birth. Data based on official statistics from the Cuban government). Cuba had the lowest birth rate and doubles the abortion rate in Latin America. Cuba's abortion rate was the 3rd highest out of the 60 countries studied. Link: The Incidence of Abortion Worldwide
 
Re: ReThe Brazilian “National Federation of Physicians”, has said, “th: Exporting Doc

Cuba’s maternal mortality rate is 33 deaths per 1,000 live births. This health statistic is high despite the fact that Cuba has the lowest birth rate in Latin America. The doctors are supposed to suggest abortion in risky pregnancies and, in some occasions, must perform the interruption without the consent of the couple. Abortion has become the main means of birth control under the Castroit regime.
 
Re: ReThe Brazilian “National Federation of Physicians”, has said, “th: Exporting Doc

Appeasement and moral cowardice will not improve things in Cuba
404 - Page Not Found | jacksonville.com
will-not-improve

By Javier Garcia-Bengochea

A recent rebuttal to my guest column on Cuba made four broad points:

■ Cuba has benefitted from socialism.

■ Cuba’s dictatorship isn’t objectionably repressive.

■ Latin America supports President Barack Obama’s engagement with Cuba.

■ My characterization of that engagement as “disgraceful” was incorrect.

Anyone who’s seen Cuba, including the writer, knows better.

Socialism has destroyed civil society. Cuba’s cities resemble Hiroshima. A “Hitler made the trains run on time” argument is disgraceful. Moreover, statistics from Cuba are entirely unreliable.

For example, what would Cuba’s infant mortality be without the highest abortion rate in the world? Or mandated abortion if there might be a birth defect? Or when Cuban doctors are ordered to “terminate” every sickly newborn — from the womb to a plastic bag — and report them as stillborn?

Cuban women cannot afford conventional contraception, yet there’s negative population growth. Abortion, being free, is Cuba’s contraceptive.

Cuba has been very successful in creating a health care apartheid: one system exclusively for foreigners and communist party elites and the other for the masses. The latter are the filthiest facilities I have seen as a physician.
Click link above for full article.
Cuban medical students and doctors must contend with a lack of modern equipment and, often, of drugs and diagnostic tools taken for granted in developed countries. The destitution of the hospitals and clinics in which Cuban doctors work makes their job extremely difficult.

Among the medical tools that have disappeared from pharmacies and hospitals nationwide are thermometers, bandages, gauze, and cotton. The scarcity in medical facilities has resulted in a decline in the quality of Cuban doctors and medical education.
 
Re: ReThe Brazilian “National Federation of Physicians”, has said, “th: Exporting Doc

Here is the link of the article again:
Guest Column: Appeasement and moral cowardice will not improve things in Cuba | jacksonville.com

Cuba's infant mortality rate is kept low by the regime’s tampering with statistics, by a low birth rate of 12.5 births per 1000 population, and by a staggering abortion rate of 77.7 abortions per 1,000 women (0.78 abortions per each live birth. Data based on official statistics from the Cuban government). Cuba had the lowest birth rate and doubles the abortion rate in Latin America. Cuba's abortion rate was the 3rd highest out of the 60 countries studied. (The Incidence of Abortion Worldwide)
 
Re: ReThe Brazilian “National Federation of Physicians”, has said, “th: Exporting Doc

Dr. Hilda Molina, a former member the Cuban National Assembly, is one of Cuba's most distinguished scientists. She broke with the government on the issue of medical apartheid, the denial of medical care or medicine to Cubans while the same services are provided to dollar-paying foreign patients. Dr. Molina is founder of Havana's International Center for Neurological Restoration. She and her elderly mother were virtual hostages on the island for15 years, until recently that were permitted to travel abroad. Dr. Hilda Molina report “Cuban Medicine Today”, was smuggled out of the island, and published by Center for a Free Cuba, December 28, 2004.
 
Re: ReThe Brazilian “National Federation of Physicians”, has said, “th: Exporting Doc

Castro regime announces Cuban doctors will have to request permission to travel
Notes from the Cuban Exile Quarter: Castro regime announces Cuban doctors will have to request permission to travel

2013 "Migration Reform" in Cuba: New rules to achieve the same result

Posted by John Suarez
December 2, 2015

Cubanos-protestan-imposicion-visa-Ecuador_LPRVID20151127_0012_31.jpg

Cubans outside the Ecuadorian embassy in Havana, Cuba

News wire services reported today that Cuba's "communist authorities said Tuesday that from December 7 doctors will again be required to ask permission to travel abroad for private reasons." According to these press sources this is news because it runs counter to 2013 "reforms", but back in a 2013 post titled "New rules for the same old game" quoted the January 11, 2013 CNN report on restrictions maintained by the Castro regime:

Specifically, the Labor and Social Security Ministry defined categories of Cubans whose travel would be restricted. They include those who may be "criminally prosecuted, are subject to military service or (are denied) for reasons of defense and national security." "Also on the list are citizens who have obligations with the state or are not authorized under rules designed to preserve the skilled workforce and protect official information," read the Prensa Latina story.
Click link above for full article.
The main reasons for the Cubans doctors to leave the country are the poor working conditions, low pay and hope for a batter future, since the Castroit regime is not able to provide them with better living and working conditions. Its restriction on the travel of doctors is on slippery slope downward.
 
Re: ReThe Brazilian “National Federation of Physicians”, has said, “th: Exporting Doc

Why is the reason that so many doctors are living since Cuba has the greatest healthcare system according to the regime? The regime is responsible for the drain due to the fact that the principle of self-interest is contrary to its communism philosophy. This restriction will not achieved the desired results.
 
Re: ReThe Brazilian “National Federation of Physicians”, has said, “th: Exporting Doc

Cuban doctors want to be paid based on the economic value of the services they render, not on the regime defined basis. Many of them moonlight as taxi drivers where they earn US dollars. The true measure of a tyrannical country is if they do not let you leave.
 
Re: ReThe Brazilian “National Federation of Physicians”, has said, “th: Exporting Doc

Doctor exodus to U.S. puts crimp in new Cuba ties
Doctor exodus to U.S. puts crimp in new Cuba ties | The Seattle Times

One year after Cuba and the United States announced their thaw, policies that hail from a more hostile era show that diplomacy after five decades of tensions will not be as easy as the raising of embassy flags.

By Victoria Burnett
FRANCES ROBLES
The New York Times
December 19, 2015

As he came of age in Cuba, José Ángel Sánchez enrolled in medical school for the usual reasons: to help the sick and to make a better living than most in his destitute eastern town. But he had another motive, too.

“It was also a way out of Cuba,” said Sánchez, 29, who moved to the United States in September, four years after he graduated as a general practitioner.

Sánchez’s escape route was set up by the U.S. government, under a 2006 program that offers U.S. residency to Cuban medical workers posted overseas. It is a door through which thousands of Cuban health workers have emigrated — and one that President Raúl Castro is determined to close.

One year after Cuba and the United States announced their thaw, policies like this, which hail from a more hostile era, show that diplomacy after five decades of tensions will not be as easy as the raising of embassy flags.
Click link above for full article.
The Castroit regime health system is a source of great cash flow, bringing over $6.5 billion a year to the regime coffers, and another $1.5 billion from the renting out the services of other professional like engineers, technicians and sport trainers. The modern slave trade of the 21st century.
 
Re: ReThe Brazilian “National Federation of Physicians”, has said, “th: Exporting Doc

Cuban doctors want to be paid based on the economic value of the services they render, not on the regime defined basis. Many of them moonlight as taxi drivers where they earn US dollars. The true measure of a tyrannical country is if they do not let you leave.

are you cuban?
 
Re: ReThe Brazilian “National Federation of Physicians”, has said, “th: Exporting Doc

Obamas Cubans refugee crisis
Cubans flee Raul Castro over fears US open-door policy will end | Daily Mail Online

By Shekhar Bhatia In La Cruz, Costa Rica, For Dailymail.com
7 January 2016

As many as 8,000 are living in squalor in Costa Rica where their attempts to reach the United States have stalled, with the central American country facing a growing humanitarian crisis over their presence.

'PEOPLE WILL WELCOME US WITH HUGS WHEN WE MAKE IT TO THE U.S.'

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Stranded: Dr Neldys Aranguren, 45,and her husband Ernesto, 53, a paramedic. 'Ernesto and I could not bear to be left behind in Cuba forever if America changed its immigration policy towards us.'

Three Cuban doctors are among the thousands caught up in the refugee crisis at La Cruz and all have given up the Cuban medical careers to begin new lives in America.

Dr Neldys Aranguren, 45, is stuck in the refugee camp at the Li Ceo Experimental Bilingual School in La Crus with her husband Ernesto, 53, a paramedic.

She said: 'I have been a doctor in Havana for 21 years and my salary is $20 dollars a month at Bejucal Hospital.

'My husband and I are fed up with the political situation in Cuba which stops people from developing and the lack of freedom.

'America is the country where people are paid properly and doctors are respected for the work they do.

'To be able to help people who are sick, I need to have proper medical equipment and facilities. It is not the case in Cuba.
Click link above for full article.
“Three Cuban doctors are among the thousands caught up in the refugee crisis at La Cruz and all have given up the Cuban medical careers to begin new lives in America.” This is a shameful example of what the Castroit regime does to its own people. Many Hollywood luminaries assure us that the regime is a socialist paradise. The Costa Rica government and its people are very compassionate to provide this stampede of Cuban nationals with food and shelter. Shame on the Castroit regime and honor to Costa Rica.
 
Re: ReThe Brazilian “National Federation of Physicians”, has said, “th: Exporting Doc

Cuban American citizens can travel to Cuba with few restrictions. Cubans, who are resident aliens, should wait five years in the U.S. before they can apply for American citizenship, and after obtaining it, earn the right to travel to Cuba. We will see then how many Cubans will be coming to the U.S. if they have to wait five years before being able to go back to Cuba.
 
Re: ReThe Brazilian “National Federation of Physicians”, has said, “th: Exporting Doc

Obama Keen to Facilitate Cuba's State-Sponsored Human Trafficking
Capitol Hill Cubans: Obama Keen to Facilitate Cuba's State-Sponsored Human Trafficking

at 9:23 AM Monday, January 11, 2016
The mask has quickly come off Obama's Cuba policy.

For the past year, Obama has purported -- at least in rhetoric -- that his new Cuba policy is aimed at increasing "support for the Cuban people."

Now, it's just blatantly looking to change policies simply because "Castro doesn't like them."

Last week, it was reported that the Obama Administration will likely end the Cuban Medical Professional Parole ("CMPP") program, which provides safe-passage for Cuban doctors who have defected in third-countries.

The rationale for this program is simple -- the terms and conditions under which Castro exports Cuban doctors-for-profit constitutes human trafficking.

Human trafficking is the Castro regime's main source of income, with the export of doctors netting over $8 billion last year alone. This is a high margin business for the Castro dictatorship, whereby Cuban doctors are coerced, have absolutely no say about salary, work in deplorable conditions and often have their passports confiscated. Meanwhile, the Castro regime keeps over 90% of their income

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Click link above for full article.
It is obvious that he State Department "manipulated and falsified" the rankings of Cuba to further the administration's political goals. This is a political move that ignores the Castroit regime poor record on combating human trafficking.
 
Re: ReThe Brazilian “National Federation of Physicians”, has said, “th: Exporting Doc

A panel of anti-human trafficking advocates and experts suggested that the Castroit regime doesn't just have a poor record on combating trafficking, but actively endorses and aids it.

As a matter of fact, it has actively promoted doctors for profit trafficking, child prostitution and sex tourism in order to support its economy and tourism industry.
 
Re: ReThe Brazilian “National Federation of Physicians”, has said, “th: Exporting Doc

Oak Lake family reeling from Cuba tragedy death of mother
Oak Lake family reeling from Cuba tragedy, death of mother - Winnipeg Free Press

By: Charles Tweed, The Brandon Sun
Posted: 01/9/2016 3:00 AM

In one month, the Johnstons endured enough heartbreak to last a family a lifetime.
In the early hours of Dec. 29, Oak Lake’s Barbara Johnston, 54, died at the Brandon Regional Health Centre. While the exact cause of the fiercely proud mother’s death isn’t known, her last month was one fraught with frustration, anguish and stress.

150109_CUBA_FAMILY4_20535077.JPG

COLIN CORNEAU / BRANDON SUN
John Johnston, with his sons Ryan and Derek beside him, recounts his experience trying to care for his sick wife, Barbara, in Cuba. The substandard hospital conditions added stress and headache for the family who is still grieving after losing Barbara on Dec. 29. (Colin Corneau/Brandon Sun)

On Nov. 20, Barbara and her husband John, like they had done so many times before, packed up their bags and flew to Cuba for a weeklong vacation.
Everything was going according to plan — sun, entertainment, food and drink — through the first five days.

Then Barbara got sick.

"It was a 36-day nightmare after that," John recounted while sitting at the kitchen table with his sons Derek, 28, and Ryan, 25.
What a nightmare for this family. Sorry to hear about the pain and misery the patient and family were forced to endure. It is so easy to forget what country you're in and what "local" life is really like in those places.
 
Re: ReThe Brazilian “National Federation of Physicians”, has said, “th: Exporting Doc

People who travel to Cuba should know not to expect the same level of health care as they have in Canada. There are many horror stories of people who have traveled to Cuba. These encompass from hospital inadequate supplies and doctors, to hotels with electricity and water not working during certain periods of time.
 
Re: ReThe Brazilian “National Federation of Physicians”, has said, “th: Exporting Doc

Dengue fever, which is transmitted by mosquitos is common in Cuba like in the area the couple was vacationing. It is very suspicious that the doctors could not determine the cause of Barbara’s illness and death.

The Aedes aegypti mosquito has developed resistance to the insecticide used in the area the couple was staying. The dengue fever epidemic has become endemic in the island. During 1979 and outbreak of dengue fever caused more than 100 deaths. The Castroit tyrannical regime has always tried to hide the facts, instead of asking the international community for help to eradicate the epidemic.
 
Re: ReThe Brazilian “National Federation of Physicians”, has said, “th: Exporting Doc

Human trafficking: the nadir of Castroist socialism
Human trafficking: the nadir of Castroist socialism | Diario de Cuba

Fabio Rafael Fiallo | Ginebra | 15 Ene 2016

The socialist model formulated by Marx and completed by Lenin aimed to be superior to capitalism in terms of its capacity to develop "productive forces," i.e. the economy's technological and material foundation. It was precisely this alleged superiority of socialism, according to its supporters, that would spawn a new society of abundance for mankind in which class divisions would lose their raison d'etre.

To realize socialism's promise the Soviet Union, and later China under Mao Tsetung, set about rapidly promoting industrialization, (Stakhanovism) and collectivizing agriculture.

The result, as we see today, has been a complete debacle. Real socialism, whether in the Soviet Union, Mao's China, or anywhere else in the world, never managed to equal, and far less surpass, capitalism's results in terms of technological innovation and agricultural and industrial growth.
Click link above for full article.
Notwithstanding that the Castroit regime is one of the world’s worst perpetrators of human trafficking, the Obama administration pushed to upgrade Cuba from Tier 3 ranking to Tier 2. What the administration is really doing is empowering the Castroit regime, not the Cuban people.
 
Re: ReThe Brazilian “National Federation of Physicians”, has said, “th: Exporting Doc

Cuba Archive: Cuba’s state-run human trafficking business
Cuba Archive: Cuba’s state-run human trafficking business |

April 1, 2016

slavedoctor.jpg


Cubaarchive.org

Part I: Forced labor: the export services of temporary workers


“Contrary to fighting human trafficking, the government is likely “one of the largest and most profitable traffickers in the world.” This statement was part of the recent testimony in Congress[1] by Cuba Archive’s Executive Director, Maria Werlau, on Cuba’s gigantic human trafficking business.

A creative scheme of forced labor —temporary workers for export— accounts for Cuba’s largest, and growing, source of revenues. According to official reports, around 65,000 are serving the Cuban government in 91 countries; 75% (around 50,000) are in the health sector. The services of doctors, sports trainers, teachers, construction workers, entertainers, sailors, scientists, architects, engineers, and many other professionals and technicians are sold through large state entities, including two large health conglomerates (ServiMed-Servicios Médicos Cubanos, S.A. and the BioFarma Cuba group), and at least 84 smaller state entities (see 403 Forbidden). Their wages, for the most part, go directly to the Cuban government, whose annual export services net of tourism grew from US$1.5 billion in 2003 to US$7.8 billon in 2011 (the latest official data from Cuba). Recent reports put the annual figure at around US$8.2 billion (three times tourism revenues reported at around $2.7 billion a year).

The violations to universally-recognized labor rights that this practice entails are numerous. Amply documented by Cuba Archive, they include chronic under-payment of wages, subsistence stipends, mandatory long hours, poor —often dangerous— living conditions, arbitrary restrictions of movement and others, retention of travel documents, and threats of retaliatory actions to the workers and their families if they defect overseas. This type of “modern slavery” violates many international agreements to which Cuba and most countries where these workers serve are parties, including conventions and protocols against human trafficking and of the International Labor Organization (ILO).

Cuba’s export business of indentured workers and its unique brand of “health diplomacy” are possible only in a totalitarian state in which a pool of guaranteed captive low-paid workers can be exploited as “exportable commodities.” The average monthly salary is $20 and $60 for doctors.

Because many Cuban workers serve “willingly,” —even eagerly— to improve their lot, it is important to note that the victims’ consent to forced labor practices does not exempt them from “human trafficking.” The legal definition is clear: “The consent of the victim to the intended exploitation is irrelevant once it is demonstrated that deception, coercion, force or other prohibited means have been used.” The Trafficking in Persons Protocol of 2000, a complement to the U.N. Convention Against Transnational Organized Crime, states that abuse of power or of a position of vulnerability for the purpose of exploitation constitutes human trafficking.

See congressional hearing and written testimony HERE:
It is not only the human trafficking business, since the 1960s the Castroit regime has been exporting blood to other countries, which has provided the regimen with millions of dollars. Beside blood, the regimen has been trafficking in the export of human body parts, making a handsome profit from them. Reports from the island on the plundering of bodies to obtain body parts are linked to the regime.
 
Re: ReThe Brazilian “National Federation of Physicians”, has said, “th: Exporting Doc

The article “Cuba's Export Blood Business: An Unprecedented Case of State-Trafficking”, shows statistics of the millions of dollars made by the Castroit regime on the sale of human blood. According to the article, since the 1960s the blood of political prisoner was drain before their executions. Link: Cuba’s Export Blood Business: An Unprecedented Case of State-Trafficking |
 
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