• Espionage Mexico, the largest client of Pegasus

The president of

Mexico, Andrés Manuel López Obrador (AMLO),

has made a historic state visit to

Havana

to reaffirm his strategic alliance with the Castro regime.

His counterpart,

Miguel Díaz Canel,

has reciprocated the strong support of the Mexican leader by granting him the order of

José Martí,

the highest Cuban distinction that foreign personalities can receive.

The visit lasted less than 24 hours, but it has allowed both delegations to

sign various bilateral agreements

on migration, trade and culture, as well as send a common message supporting Latin American integration and rejecting the interventionist attitude of the

US.

"We must build something similar to the

European Union,

but attached to our history, reality and identities. In that spirit, the elimination of the

Organization of American States (OAS)

by a truly autonomous body and not anyone's lackey should not be ruled out. Although it may seem like a dream, we must try, try to achieve integration with respect for sovereignty and forms of government," AMLO assured in his speech.

Together with a smiling Miguel Díaz Canel, the Mexican president wanted to thank "the generous, supportive and exemplary people of Cuba" for the treatment received and maintained that "I will continue to insist

that the US lift the blockade."

AMLO has been

openly critical of the veto that the US

wants to impose on several countries in the region,

such as Cuba, Nicaragua or Venezuela,

to prevent their representatives from attending the

Summit of the Americas

to be held in

Los Angeles

next June. : "I will insist to President

Biden

on this matter (...) so that the authorities of each country freely decide whether or not to attend the meeting, but that no one excludes anyone."

The Mexican leader has also stressed that "I have never bet, I do not bet nor will I bet on the failure of the Cuban revolution, on its idea of ​​justice and its lessons of independence and dignity, I will never participate with coup plotters who conspire against those ideals."

The Mexican leader has not made any mention of the wave of arrests against opponents waged by the Castro regime after the historic demonstrations last July, but he has sent a message betting on the renewal of the Castro project: "I prefer to continue maintaining

hope that the revolution be reborn in the revolution,

that it be capable of renewing itself to follow the example of the martyrs who fought for freedom and justice. I have the conviction and faith that things are being done with that purpose, this is the second great teaching of Cuba for the world, this people will once again demonstrate that reason is more powerful than force".

Tour of Central America

With his visit to Havana, AMLO has closed a

four-day tour of Central America and the Caribbean

that has allowed him to present his migration plan for the region: "that migration be optional and not forced," he insisted.

Little given to leaving his country -he has only done so three times since he became president, all of them to the US-, the Mexican leader has embarked on several commercial flights to visit

Guatemala, Honduras, El Salvador and Belize.

In addition to strengthening ties with his counterparts, López Obrador has insisted on the need to strengthen border controls in the face of the imminent

cancellation of the controversial article 42 in the US,

a law promoted by

Donald Trump

to reject asylum applications during the pandemic and that, when is no longer in force, it could provoke a new

migration crisis

in the region.

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  • USA

  • Cuba

  • Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador

  • Venezuela

  • Nicaragua

  • OAS

  • Mexico