The Lib Narrative About the Minneapolis ICE Shooting Took Another Brutal Hit
Reconciliation 2.0 Has Arrived
Here's the Anti-Trump FBI Agent Who Launched the Surveillance Probe of the Entire...
A CNN Guest Got Way Ahead of Her Skis Over This Claim About...
Tim Walz Just Did a Major Flip-Flop on This Minnesota U.S. Attorney
The Latest Update Out of Iran As Regime Attempts to Squash Uprising Will...
U.S. Sees Net Negative Migration for the First Time in Decades
After Democrat Smears, Tom Homan Confirmed ICE Agent and Family Were Forced to...
This Is What's at Stake As SCOTUS Mulls the Issue of Men in...
Cut Them Off NOW!
The Prime of Tough-Guy Progressivism
Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey Shrugs Off Assaults on ICE Agents: They Are Standing...
ACLU Lawyer Stumped When Justice Alito Asks for the Definition of Man and...
Watch: Woman Dragged Out of Car by ICE After Impeding Enforcement Operations in...
Time to Crack Down on Fraud
Tipsheet

Raul Castro Slams the United States: Our Stance on Human Rights Will Not Change

During a rare press conference in Havana, Cuba Monday, Communist Dictator Raul Castro became irritated with reporter questions about human rights abuses inside the country and accused the United States of double standards on the issue. 

Advertisement

Standing next to President Obama, who "normalized" relations with Cuba in December 2014, Castro accused the United States of racism, failing to provide the "rights" of education and healthcare to its people and accused the government of condoning unequal pay for men and women.

"The United States shouldn't be immune to criticism," Castro said, clearly frustrated and irritated with press questions. "Human rights issues should not be politicized...our stance on human rights will not change." 

Castro also denied the regime holds political prisoners, despite arresting more than 50 dissidents just hours before President Obama's arrival on the island.

"What political prisoners? Give me a name? Give me a list?" Castro said, ending the press conference. "It's not correct to ask me about political prisoners. This is enough."

Practicing journalism against the government is illegal in Cuba and in 2014, Castro expressed concern surrounding American journalism professors training Cubans inside the country about how to conduct reporting.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos