Cuban President Miguel Diaz-Canel (L) and former President Raul Castro (R) wave Cuban flags during an act of revolutionary reaffirmation in Havana, on July 17, 2021, six days after the historic protests that shook the country. ( AFP / YAMIL LAGE)

Cuban president did not 'announce resignation' immediately after anti-government protests

  • This article is more than one year old.
  • Published on July 26, 2021 at 11:28
  • Updated on July 26, 2021 at 11:54
  • 2 min read
  • By AFP Hong Kong
After thousands of Cubans marched in anti-government protests, Chinese-language social media posts claimed that President Miguel Diaz-Canel announced he would resign in a televised broadcast on July 17. The claim is false: Diaz-Canel criticised what he said was a "false narrative" of the unrest, but did not say he would step down. As of July 26, 2021, he was still serving as Cuba's president. 

"This morning (July 17) Havana Time, the Community Party of Cuban's president and first secretary Miguel Diaz-Canel announced in a televised broadcast: Resigned from public office and party leadership," reads a traditional Chinese-language tweet posted on July 18.

"Full launch of political deepening and economic reforms, new foreign relations policy, free elections in the country, and participation of the Cuban Communist Party in the election of congressmen as a political party. This means Cuba has been released from its one-party dictatorship."

Image
A screenshot, taken on July 21, 2021, of the misleading post. ( AFP)

In mid-July 2021, thousands of Cubans joined anti-government protests in 40 cities. AFP reported on the unrest here.

A similar claim was shared on Facebook here and here and on Twitter here and here.

The claim is, however, false. 

A keyword search on Google found a transcript of Diaz-Canel's speech on July 17.

It was published here on the president's official site. 

Image
A screenshot, taken on July 26, 2021, of the Cuba President's speech transcript. ( AFP)

At the rally, he decried what he said was the dissemination of "false images" on social networks that "glorify the outrage and destruction of property." 

"What the world is seeing of Cuba is a lie," he said

Diaz-Canel did not announce he would resign from office. 

As of July 26, he remained in power. AFP found no credible news reports about his purported resignation.

Is there content that you would like AFP to fact-check? Get in touch.

Contact us