football

China, Russia Back Cuba After US Indicts Raúl Castro

Yahoo Sports

Beijing and Moscow jointly condemned the U.S.'s threats and sanctions against Cuba.

Beijing and Moscow have separately condemned the U. S. ’s indictment of Cuba’s former President Raúl Castro and voiced solidarity with the Caribbean nation amid Washington’s pressure campaign.

The U. S. must stop wielding the “big sticks” of judicial proceedings and sanctions and cease its threats of force against Cuba , Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Guo Jiakun told reporters at a regular press briefing in Beijing on Thursday.

Guo said China opposes unilateral sanctions that lack basis under international law or approval by the United Nations Security Council. Cuba’s former President Raul Castro holds a Cuban national flag as he attends a May Day rally marking International Workers’ Day in Havana on May 1, 2026. Russia echoed China in a separate statement, strongly condemning what it called “gross interference in the internal affairs of a sovereign state, intimidation, and the use of illegal unilateral restrictive measures, threats, and blackmail,” its Foreign Ministry spokesperson Maria Zakharova said at a press conference.

Russia would “continue to provide the most active support to the fraternal Cuban people,” she said. Castro and several other Cuban nationals were indicted by the U. S.