Cuba: The Brothel Of The Americas

The Castro regime curried favor with global elites by offering young Cubans for sexual services.

Diego Maradona Mavys Alvarez screen capture

Everyone is talking about pedo Jeffrey Epstein's island. But when are they going to talk about Fidel Castro's infamous island? It's not an isolated case. It wasn't just Argentine football star Diego Maradona, a drug addict psychotically obsessed with the Castro clan. It wasn't just Maradona's teenage girlfriend, who met with Comandante Fidel Castro so that he would allow her to leave Cuba.

Colombian novelist Gabriel García Márquez was a frequent visitor to Havana and was long rumored to satisfy his homosexual desires with young boys there. A frequent and privileged visitor to Cuba since the 1970s, he had direct access to Fidel Castro, exclusive residences, and access to otherwise closed circles. Several testimonies from former cultural officials and journalists in exile describe private parties and young companions selected by the cultural apparatus. 

In the case of Cuban musician and politician Silvio Rodríguez, there are legally documented cases of his relationships with very young women in the 1970s and 1980s. He was publicly acknowledged to have had multiple simultaneous relationships while he was a state-protected artist. Jean-Paul Sartre and Simone de Beauvoir, known paedophiles, visited Cuba in 1960. Their fascination with Cuban youth and the eroticisation of the "new man" is documented in diaries and letters. Brazilian crooner Chico Buarque had extended stays in Cuba in the 1970s and 1980s. There are testimonies from exiled Brazilian intellectuals describing an atmosphere of easy sex for ideologically reliable guests. Uruguayan socialist Eduardo Galeano was a regular visitor. Private chronicles and third-party testimonies describe his protected nightlife, hotels for foreigners, and escorts. The same man who wrote against "sexual imperialism" enjoyed the system.

Between the 1980s and 1990s, there were coordinated networks of hotels, guides, prostitutes, and state security personnel. These were not casual hook-ups. There were intermediaries: translators, cultural officials, drivers, and trusted receptionists. The escorts were not improvised: discretion, political loyalty, and subsequent silence were evaluated.

Everything took place in closed spaces such as protocol residences, isolated bungalows, and reserved hotel floors. There were entrances and exits without visible registration, protected schedules, and zero cameras. The intimacy included imported alcohol, food inaccessible to ordinary Cubans, and private music.

And this was at the official level.

What about ordinary people? Cuba became a global brothel. Countless foreigners went to Cuba to have sex with minors, to marry girls with the consent of their parents, and the authorities turned a blind eye. No, Fidel Castro and his acolytes did not need to rub shoulders with Jeffrey Epstein because they had their own sexual empire, with much less transparency in terms of documentation that could incriminate them in the future. 

Topic tags:
human rights