Cuba and Mexico Present Joint Declaration in Havana

The presidents of Cuba, Miguel Díaz-Canel, and of Mexico, Andrés Manuel López Obrador, respectively, presented this Sunday the Joint Declaration between both countries, within the framework of the tour of Central America and the island carried out by the Mexican president.

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The document signed at the Palace of the Revolution highlights the interest of both governments in promoting development in the educational, cultural, commercial and economic areas, while ratifying cooperation to face the challenges posed by the Covid-19 pandemic and other disasters or epidemics.

The Mexican Head of State, in a long speech, rejected that the United States had excluded Cuba, along with Venezuela and Nicaragua, from the Summit of the Americas to be held next month in Los Angeles, California.

The President of the Republic of Cuba held official talks with the President of the United Mexican States. They expressed the will of both governments to continue deepening the ties of brotherhood that unite us.

President Díaz-Canel called on López Obrador to strengthen the relationship between the two nations, and also highlighted the Joint Declaration signed by the leaders.

The Cuban leader thanked the Mexican government for its firm rejection of the blockade imposed by the United States on the island.

He also thanked Mexico’s intervention in CELAC to improve hemispheric relations and the efforts of the López Obrador government to declare Central America and the Caribbean a zone of peace.

In his speech, Díaz-Canel thanked the solidarity expressed by Mexico in the face of the explosion at the Saratoga hotel in Havana, which left thirty dead and dozens injured, in addition to severe damage to the historic building.

The highest representatives of Cuba and Mexico signed agreements on trade and health matters, as well as agreements on economic, financial and cultural matters, at the Palace of the Revolution in the Cuban capital.

In this sense, the Minister of Public Health of the Republic of Cuba, José Ángel Portal Miranda, and the Secretary of Health of the United Mexican States, Jorge Carlos Alcocer Varela, signed this afternoon a cooperation agreement between both countries.

In his first activity in Havana, the Mexican president laid a floral offering at the José Martí Memorial in the Plaza de la Revolución, accompanied by Cuban Vice President Salvador Valdés Mesa.

Later, López Obrador received from the hands of the Cuban president the José Martí National Order, the highest distinction awarded by the Cuban State.

“We recognize your valuable contributions to regional peace, the efforts you have made to strengthen the unity of our region are remarkable,” said Josefina Vidal, Cuban Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs.

López Obrador arrived in Mexico City the day before at 7:30 p.m. local time from Belize, and was received at the air terminal by Bruno Rodríguez Parrilla, Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Caribbean island.

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