Cuban parliament rubber-stamps normalization with US

By
AFP
Cuban parliament rubber-stamps normalization with US
HAVANA: Cuba´s parliament on Friday unanimously ratified a deal reached between Havana and Washington normalizing relations after a half-century of hostility.

"The Cuban parliament today gave its unanimous support" to the bilateral thaw, which was outlined Wednesday in a speech by President Raul Castro, the Cuban news agency Prensa Latina said shortly after the start of the session.

Castro is chairing the twice-yearly meeting of parliament in a session largely focused on the communist island´s historic renewal of ties with the United States.

He had been due to give a closing address in the evening, but the session was extended to Saturday to finish discussions on the Cuban economy, the originally scheduled topic, reported state news agency AIN.

The session was also attended by the "Cuban Five," the group of intelligence agents jailed in the United States whose last three members were released in a prisoner exchange that paved the way for Wednesday´s landmark rapprochement.

The men are hailed as national heroes in Havana, which says they were not spying on Washington but rather on Cuban exile groups determined to attack the island.

"This ordinary session has the historic singularity of being held with the five anti-terrorist heroes back in the motherland and the announcement that Cuba and the United States have reestablished diplomatic relations," said AIN as the session opened early Friday.

Cuba´s 612-member National Assembly has no opposition representatives and meets twice a year.