The Cuban guard jerked off her clothing and put himself inside her, it was under the Veranda, the New Cuban Embassy in Washington D.C. as the U.S. Representative ate his late night plate of Cuban foods and drank free Russian vodka, alone in the kitchen.
It was the cook trying to calm her down but her fear could not be controlled. It had only been a few moments before that she had been attacked, as her body still convulsed, tears slid down her face as she pulled up her torn clothing.
In the place of dignitaries the Cuban representative raped her and apparently had knocked her down in the garden as the birds fled upward from the trees.
It was the cook trying to calm her down but her fear could not be controlled. It had only been a few moments before that she had been attacked, as her body still convulsed, tears slid down her face as she pulled up her torn clothing.
In the place of dignitaries the Cuban representative raped her and apparently had knocked her down in the garden as the birds fled upward from the trees.
The small dark
Cuban guard pushed past her dignity and self-respect when she had told him no
as his hand exposed his helpless penis without her.
This Cuban was now on American soil, the new
embassy was open and with several quick strokes inside her he was almost
done. Only a month ago he was a poor
Cuban man working for Castro on the island but he had been promoted to Embassy
guard and all the benefits that came with it.
Her shouting was a tremendous noise so he had hit her several times and
a few deafening shots to the side of her heard.
She could no longer hear him but she felt him.
He was from
Castro's Cuba where dysentery and malaria thrived not to mention decades of
crime, rape and murder so it was nothing to treat the white woman as a
prostitute.
The Americans had been
fooled by their Negro president again so the guard sat under the veranda and
sipped on his drink with that Castro smile on his face. The rapist also knew that Barack Obama would close GITMO before he left office and cut up the never ending land lease with Cuba. The Castro Brothers promised much and they were about to deliver. Billions of American greenback dollars would flow to the Communist nation and they were making plans, having this one girl was only the beginning. Islam can keep their virgins in heaven, the guard wanted his now. F.ck them all.
The woman had
been handing out oranges to the few guests still remaining and wandered to ever
corner of the new Cuban embassy. She had
seen him sitting under the veranda and approached him with her broad smile and
a hello in Spanish, her second language learned during her two years at a
community college.
He had laid
her out like a spit roast pig and raped her like he was having sex with a goat
as she moved from happy to dizzy under the veranda.
She heard
drumming in her head as he entered her, shouting at her to remain calm taking
notice that he smelled as other men flocked forward to watch. It was then that she saw the Cuban soldiers
lower their weapons and their pants as she became stunned and scattered.
They emerged
and played with themselves and her body was being confused with too much
touching and too many men, eventually, unable to make a sound.
Someone was
dragging her, pulling at her breasts as her weeping did not stop their pushing
and pulling inside her and then it all came to a halt, they had finished and
were pleased.
She managed to
pick herself up, slowly supporting her own weight she walked to the kitchen
where the cook caught her falling as she lost her balance.
Sitting at the
kitchen table, sitting alone eating, the U.S. Representative to Cuba, paying
her little attention.
It was a good
day for Cuba.
The Cuban Embassy in Washington, D.C., reopened Monday
morning, marking the official end to 61 years of hostility between the Cuban
and American governments.
Cuban Minister of Foreign Affairs Bruno Rodríguez Parrilla
was on hand in Washington to raise the Cuban flag as the Cuban and American National
Anthems played in sequence.
The event was met with both fanfare and anger.
“I’m very happy,” said Lindolfo Carballo, a community
organizer originally from El Salvador. “I’m only hoping the United States is
going to [take] the next step, which is ending the embargo against Cuba.”
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But the event was not without protest.
“The fact of the matter is the Cuban government and American
government have come to an agreement, but the people are not included in any of
this,” said José Badué, a Cuban-American whose father was executed in Cuba when
his mother was pregnant with him. “None of these people here who supposedly
represent the Cuban government were elected by the people. So the people have
not spoken.”
It remains to be seen whether the United States will lift
the embargo, originally issued in 1960, or address documented human rights
violations including censorship and repression that have plagued Cubans for
decades.
Only Congress has the authority to fully lift the embargo.
.
.
Today a Cuban embassy will open in the United
States, and an American embassy will open in Cuba. While the Obama
administration fawns over its latest concession to the Castro regime, I will be
honoring the legacy of a Cuban democratic martyr.
On July 22, 2012, the Cuban government murdered my
friend’s father, Oswaldo Payá, and Harold Cepero. Their car was deliberately
run off a road by the Cuban government.
To this day, there has never been an independent
investigation into their deaths, and the Cuban government has never been held
accountable. The Castro regime’s complicity and downright attacks against human
rights activists have become all too common.
Earlier that same year, Amnesty International
prisoner of conscience Orlando Zapata Tamayo died in prison after the Cuban
government denied him water during a hunger strike. The following year, a
founder of the Ladies in White, Laura Inés Pollán, died following what is
widely suspected to be poisoning by the Cuban government. Their murders were
particularly audacious, since they were some of Cuba’s best-known dissidents.
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These heroic figures presented a direct threat to
the regime. In 1988, Oswaldo Payá founded the Christian Liberation Movement,
the largest and arguably the most powerful dissident organization on the
island. Founded by Catholics, the organization was founded on the belief of
human dignity and democratic governance.
Perhaps Oswaldo Payá’s greatest contribution to
Cuban freedom was the “Varela Project,” an initiative in which 11,000 brave
Cubans petitioned the Cuban government for political and social freedoms. It
should be noted that at the time, the “Constitution of Cuba guaranteed the
right to a national referendum on any proposal that achieved 10,000 or more
signatures.” This heroic effort was absolutely unprecedented in Castro’s Cuba.
Payá was known throughout the world as Cuba’s
leading pro-democracy figure. In 2002, the European Parliament awarded him the Sakharov
Prize, and in 2005, he was nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize by Václav Havel,
the former president of the Czech Republic.
Following his death, the U.S. Senate “unanimously
approved a resolution honoring the life and legacy of Oswaldo Payá.” That
resolution included a call for the “[g]overnment of Cuba to allow an impartial,
third-party investigation into the circumstances surrounding the death of
Oswaldo Payá Sardinas.”
Since his death, his daughter Rosa Maria Payá has
carried on her father’s legacy. For the past three years, she’s traveled the
world, calling on the international community to hold the Cuban government
accountable. The United Nations in particular has been an abysmal failure in
this case. The governments of China, Pakistan, Belarus and Nicaragua joined the
Cuban government in trying to block Rosa Maria Payá’s speech before the Human
Rights Council. As her father’s daughter, she’s spent much of her life under
surveillance and death threats by the Cuban government.
Earlier this year, in testimony before the Senate
Foreign Relations Committee, Payá warned the Obama administration:
The Cuban government wouldn’t have dared to carry
out its death threats against my father if the U.S. government and the
democratic world had been showing solidarity. If you turn your face, impunity
rages. While you slept, the regime was conceiving their cleansing of the
pro-democracy leaders to come. While you sleep, a second generation of
dictators is planning with impunity their next crimes.
Any decent person should be morally outraged that
the White House has allowed Oswaldo Payá’s death to go unpunished. Next week,
while Obama’s diplomats celebrate alongside their Cuban counterparts, I’ll be
lighting a candle in the memory of Oswaldo Payá.
.
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