Former Cuban President Raul Castro indicted for murder by US

The Independent The Independent — 51sec

Former Cuban President Raul Castro has been indicted on murder charges in the United States in connection with a 1996 attack that left four people dead.

The indictment, filed in Miami federal court, charges him with one count of conspiracy to kill U.S. nationals, four counts of murder, and two counts of destruction of aircraft.

Five other people are also named as defendants in the case.

The charges are a major escalation in the Trump administration’s push for regime change in Cuba, where Castro's communists have been in charge since his late brother Fidel Castro led a revolution in 1959.


"My message today is clear: The United States and President Trump does not and will not forget its citizens," acting Attorney General Todd Blanche said Wednesday to applause in a packed auditorium of government officials and Cuban Americans in Miami.

Cuba's foreign ministry did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Castro, 94, last appeared in public in Cuba earlier this month, and there is no evidence that he has since left the island or that the government would allow him to be extradited.

In a statement earlier on Wednesday, U.S. President Donald Trump called Cuba a "rogue state harboring hostile foreign military" and framed his administration's actions regarding the Caribbean island as part of a broader effort to expand U.S. influence in the Western Hemisphere.

"From the shores of Havana to the banks of the Panama Canal, we will drive out the forces of lawlessness and crime and foreign encroachment," Trump said at a Coast Guard Academy event in New London, Connecticut.

Cuban President Miguel Diaz-Canel said Monday that the island does not represent a threat.

The indictment marks a new low in relations between the longtime Cold War rivals.

After taking power, Fidel Castro struck an alliance with the Soviet Union, then seized U.S.-owned businesses and properties.

The U.S. has since maintained an economic embargo on the nation of about 10 million.

The two sides have talked intermittently over the years.

Diplomatic relations briefly improved during former Democratic President Barack Obama's second term, but Trump, a Republican, has taken a harder line.

Members of Miami's large Cuban American community gathered outside the city's Freedom Tower ahead of the ceremony.

"We all hoped for a long time, for many years that this would happen," said Bobby Ramirez, a 62-year-old musician who left Cuba in 1971 when he was seven years old.

The ceremony is taking place on the anniversary of the end of a four-year U.S. military occupation of Cuba on May 20, 1902, which itself followed centuries of Spanish colonial rule.

Cuba's government does not consider the date to mark the country's independence day, arguing that it remained subservient to Washington until the 1959 revolution.

In a post on X, Diaz-Canel said that in Cuban history, May 20 signified "intervention, interference, dispossession, frustration."

Under Trump, the U.S. has effectively imposed a blockade on Cuba by threatening sanctions on countries supplying it with fuel, triggering power outages and exacerbating its worst crisis in decades.

U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio earlier on Wednesday offered Cuba $100 million in aid, and blamed Cuba's leaders for shortages of electricity, food and fuel.

Cuban Foreign Minister Bruno Rodriguez called that offer cynical, citing the "devastating effect" of the economic blockade.

TRUMP HAS SAID CUBA 'IS NEXT'
Born in 1931, Raul Castro was a key figure alongside his older brother in the guerrilla war that toppled U.S.-backed dictator Fulgencio Batista.

He helped defeat the U.S.-organized Bay of Pigs invasion in 1961, and served as defense minister for decades.

He succeeded his brother as president in 2008 and stepped down in 2018, but remains a powerful behind-the-scenes figure in Cuban politics.

He was defense minister at the time of the 1996 incident.

The two small planes that were shot down were being flown by Brothers to the Rescue, a group of Miami-based Cuban exile pilots who said their mission was to search for Cuban rafters fleeing the island.

All four men aboard were killed.

Portraits of the four were displayed behind Blanche as he spoke in Miami's Freedom Tower, which served as a refugee center for Cubans in the 1960s.

#RaulCastro
#Cuba
#FidelCastro
#CubanPresident
#CubaLeader
#DOJ
#Indictment
#BrothersToTheRescue
#CubanPolitics
#WorldNews