Friday, November 22, 2024

Ana de Armas under fire after new boyfriend is revealed as the Cuban president’s stepson

Ana de Armas has restricted her comments on Instagram as she faces massive backlash over her romance with the stepson of Cuba‘s president.

The Cuban actress, 36, is being savagely slammed online by her compatriots and others who accuse her of dating the son of a dictatorship that she herself escaped.

Ana was pictured on a romantic stroll in Madrid with 26-year-old Manuel Anido Cuesta, the stepson of Miguel Díaz-Canel Bermúdez, who was handpicked by Raul Castro and  ‘chosen’ in an election in which there were no opposition challengers allowed.

Diaz Canel has overseen the collapse of Cuba’s economy and continued the Castro doctrine that allows no opposition parties or protests against the ruling party. Like the Castros before him, he has been accused of overseeing massive human rights abuses.

He is Cuba’s first leader in six decades not surnamed Castro, after Raul Castro went into semi-retirement following his stint as president. He had taken over from his brother, Cuba’s revolutionary leader Fidel Castro, in 2016. 

The Knives Out star, who left Cuba and moved to Spain at the age of 18, was previously dating Tinder vice-president Paul Boukadakis. 

One X user wrote: ‘Ana de Armas left Cuba to pursue a career and life in America… just to end up dating the Cuban dictator’s son… wtf?’

Another said: ‘ana de armas is dating the stepson of the tyrant that runs the dictatorship she ran away from? this bad this is bad this is very bad.’

Agustin Antonetti wrote: ‘These images must travel the world, people must not have a mercy.

‘The famous actress Ana de Armas was photographed in Madrid with the Cuban genocidal Manuel Anido Cuesta, stepson of the dictator Díaz Canel and possible successor. 

‘They are a couple. Murderers. Enjoying Madrid as if nothing was happening.’

Anido Cuesta, a lawyer, is the son of Diaz Canel’s wife Lis Cuesta from a previous relationship.

He is a close advisor to the authoritarian leader and is often seen at official events and trips with him, including to the Vatican and the UAE.

Anido Cuesta has been accused of living a luxurious lifestyle abroad while the majority of Cubans on the island live in poverty. 

Anido Cuesta, is seen on an official trip with a Cuban delegation in Dubai with the CEO of Dubai Multi Commodities Centre Ahmed Sultan Bin Sulayem

Ana’s own brother, photographer Javier Caso, is an activist against the Cuban regime. In 2020, he was interrogated on the island for his connections with opposition artists and activists. 

In 2021, Caso was part of a hunger strike with artist Luis Manuel Otero Alcántara against what they have called a dictatorship in Cuba.

Cuba is currently undergoing another ‘special period,’ as is struggles with one of the worst economic and energy crises in its history.

Besides waves of blackouts, citizens are frustrated over food shortages and inflation. Hundreds of thousands have migrated, many headed to the United States.

Large-scale blackouts left 10 million people — already reeling from a deepening economic crisis — without power for days last month.

Cuba’s government has faced simmering frustrations and rare protests after it sharply hiked gas prices, further squeezing the pocketbooks of Cubans, who struggle to pay for the most basic food items, like eggs and chicken. 

He is a close advisor to the authoritarian leader and is often seen at official events and trips with him, including to the Vatican last year, pictured above

Diaz Canel, left, is seen with his wife and stepson (behind her) in St Petersburg, Russia  in 2019

The Cuban government blames the U.S. economic embargo for its woes, but Cuba’s power grid has been left in disrepair and the government has long failed to invest in alternative energies like solar power, despite a plethora of sunshine.

As a result, Cuba’s main source of power has been fossil fuels. It long depended on its regional ally Venezuela until aid disappeared as the oil-rich nation fell into crisis.

In recent years, Cuba leaned on Russia, which was sending hundreds of millions of dollars in fuel just two years ago. That helped to alleviate a massive shortfall in Cuba’s supplies while simultaneously helping to ease the weight of international sanctions on Russia for its invasion of Ukraine.

This post was originally published on this site

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