The communist Castro dictatorship has sent another dozen medical professionals to the Caribbean island nation of Dominca where they will work as slave labor for the regime. Their salaries will be paid directly to the Cuban government, who keeps up to 90% of it, in what is nothing short of modern-day slavery.
After sending a delegation of healthcare professionals to Dominica last September, the Cuban regime has exported another group of 12 doctors to that country, as reported by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MINREX) of Cuba on its official website.
The doctors arrived this Friday at Douglas-Charles International Airport, where the Cuban Ambassador, Miguel Fraga, and Dr. Lynora Fevrier Drigo, Chief Medical Officer of Dominica, welcomed them as members of the Cuban Medical Brigade already providing services in the nation.
Over the past four years, the Cuban dictatorship has exported more than 200 doctors to Antigua and Barbuda, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, Dominica, and Saint Lucia. The number has been gradually increasing through small groups, which has made tracking difficult.
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The so-called “Cuban medical missions” have been widely criticized by the international community and labeled by multilateral organizations as a “form of modern slavery.”
At the end of last year, the United Nations (UN) targeted the Cuban regime for its violations of human and labor rights, particularly concerning its medical professionals deployed on “international missions.” The accusation also implicates recipient countries such as Italy, Qatar, and Spain.
Despite its human trafficking and enslavement of Cubans, the communist Castro dictatorship continues to be lauded for its “medical missions.” The international community has no apparent concern over Cubans being sold as chattel.