Russia's Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov poses for a photo during a wreath laying ceremony at the Jose Marti Monument in Havana, Cuba, Thursday, April 20, 2023. At left are Cuban Deputy Director General of the Department of Bilateral Affairs of the Cuban Foreign Affair Ministry, Angel Villa, and at right is Director of Europe of the Cuban Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Gisela Garcia (Yamil Lage/POOL via AP)
Russia's Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov, center, walks away after a wreath laying ceremony at the Jose Marti Monument in Havana, Cuba, Thursday, April 20, 2023. (Yamil Lage/POOL via AP)
Russia's Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov poses for a photo during a wreath laying ceremony at the Jose Marti Monument in Havana, Cuba, Thursday, April 20, 2023. At left are Cuban Deputy Director General of the Department of Bilateral Affairs of the Cuban Foreign Affair Ministry, Angel Villa, and at right is Director of Europe of the Cuban Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Gisela Garcia (Yamil Lage/POOL via AP)
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Russia's Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov, center, walks away after a wreath laying ceremony at the Jose Marti Monument in Havana, Cuba, Thursday, April 20, 2023. (Yamil Lage/POOL via AP)
HAVANA (AP) — Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov condemned U.S. sanctions on Cuba on Thursday as he visited the island and met with top leaders, including newly re-elected President Miguel DÃaz-Canel.
Lavrov was on the last leg of a Latin American tour that has taken him to , Nicaragua and .
The Russian foreign minister met with DÃaz-Canel and semi-retired but still influential leader Raul Castro, according to photographs published by the Communist Party newspaper Granma, although no further details were offered on the content of the meetings.
During his visit to the island nation, which for decades was a staunch Moscow ally, Lavrov condemned the American economic sanctions on Cuba, and blasted the U.S. for seeking to impose “its will on the world,†according to a dispatch on the state media outlet Cubadebate.
RodrÃguez, for his part, rejected what he called the “expansionist aspirations†of NATO and the sanctions imposed on Russia.
Cuba has had an extensive relationship with Moscow since the 1960s, when it joined the bloc of socialist countries led by the then Soviet Union, receiving many vital imports — fertilizers, industrial equipment, spare parts and, above all, oil — in exchange for sugar.
Russia, along with Venezuela, is one of Cuba’s few suppliers of oil, sending an undetermined amount to the island, which is undergoing a severe energy crisis.
Also, two weeks ago, Cuban banks started to accept payments with MIR cards, a payment system in Russia that allows Russian tourists to make cash withdrawals and convert rubles to Cuban pesos.
MIR cards are accepted in other partner countries of Russia, including Turkey and Vietnam, and are operated by the state-owned Russian National Card Payment System.