• @jet@hackertalks.com
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    231 year ago

    I’m confused, the human trafficking implies those people didn’t consent but ij the article they call them mercenaries for hire. Which is it?

          • @KevonLooney@lemm.ee
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            -91 year ago

            But there’s a reason why Cuban citizens can’t leave the country legally (it’s not the free healthcare).

                • Match!!
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                  131 year ago

                  Poverty is the main barrier for people from any country leaving their country

                • @KevonLooney@lemm.ee
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                  11 year ago

                  Yes, the cost of a passport (charged by the Cuban government) is now a barrier. Also, they may not allow you to leave if you are a doctor, baseball player, communist official, etc.

                  So yes, people can “leave” now if they have a lot of money and permission from the government. It’s nothing like a free country.

                  They use their doctors as educated slave labor:

                  https://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-cuba-trafficking-idUSKBN1WC00X

                  https://www.hrw.org/news/2020/07/23/cuba-repressive-rules-doctors-working-abroad

                  • @sevenapples@lemmygrad.ml
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                    31 year ago

                    https://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-cuba-trafficking-idUSKBN1WC00X

                    I wouldn’t trust the country that tried to assassinate Cuba’s leader, overthrow their government and organized terrorist attacks in its land to have valid criticisms for Cuba.

                    https://www.hrw.org/news/2020/07/23/cuba-repressive-rules-doctors-working-abroad

                    Health workers may also face criminal penalties if they “abandon” their jobs.

                    This sounds bad, but then again they’re on a foreign mission, with their country’s reputation on the line. A considerable amount of health workers abandoning their jobs might make the mission infeasible, which could create diplomatic issues for Cuba. Also, I wonder if that’s the case on soldiers (American or otherwise) on foreign missions. I would expect that they can’t abandon their jobs without penalty, and I don’t see how this is that different.

                    it is considered a “disciplinary offense” to have “relationships” with anyone whose “actions are not consistent with the principles and values of the Cuban society,” as well as to be “friends or establish any other links” with Cuban dissidents, people who have “hostile or contrary views to the Cuban revolution,” or who are “promoters of a way of life contrary to the principles that a Cuban collaborator abroad must represent.”

                    Again, these seem restrictions that would apply on soldiers on foreign missions, so it doesn’t seem weird to me that they apply to Cuba’s medical missions.

                    Under Resolution 168, doctors need “authorization and instructions” to “express opinions” to the media about “internal situations in the workplace” or that “put the Cuban collaboration at risk.” It is also an offense to “disseminate or propagate opinions or rumors that undermine the morals or prestige of the group or any of its members.”

                    I believe Cuba wouldn’t need to enforce this if they weren’t under -economic- siege by the US and their allies. What the doctors do or say on the missions could be the start of a diplomatic incident.

                    Others said they joined in the hope of leaving the country or of obtaining access to food, such as meat, which they cannot buy with their salaries in Cuba.

                    I can’t help but wonder if meat would be cheaper in Cuba without the embargo against them.

    • @deft@ttrpg.network
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      281 year ago

      Because in Cuba it is illegal to have mercenary groups, Cuba doesn’t do this.

      On top of that they want no hand in this mess Russia made for themselves. So they’re prosecuting aggressively in response.