She also may have misspoke about the fact that the boat was already sinking before the Cuban CG arrived. We know the boat was already sinking when they called the US CG, and we know the US CG called the Cuban CG to rescue them. We also know that if a Cuban CG cruiser ran over the little dingy multiple times as the "mistaken" woman claims there would have been many more deaths than just the one guy who fell overboard, probably drunk on Cuban rum. The Cuban CG might have run over sinking boat after rescuing the people, but only the most gullible fools could swallow the BS that they ran over a boat full of 32 people with only one person dead and no others injured. Remember the woman claims the boat was "repeatedly charged and hit by a boat manned by the Cuban Coast Guard."
Were YOU there EddyBoy, to dispute her story? Or just blowing smoke as usual?
I don't have to be there to see the glaring holes in her phony story, they are so obvious.
The only casualty was the one guy who fell overboard from the crowdwd boat. If the tiny boat had been rammed over and over by a CG cruiser there would be many casualties.
You really are THIS STUPID.... from the article...
"According to witnesses aboard, the Cuban government sank a boat attempting to reach American shores carrying 32 people, including an 8-year-old child,
and some passengers remain missing."
Can you read?
That's BigotBarf, so it has no credibility. According to the Miami Herald, only one man (singular) is missing.
Cuban migrant missing after Cuban Coast Guard sinks boat - Baltimore Sun
According to Ramon Saul Sanchez, president of Democracy Movement, the people on the boat said
the incident occurred in international waters at about 22 miles from Cuban territory. "This is not the way to deal with people who are just trying to flee a brutal tyranny," he said.
Sanchez and Sergio Diaz Alfonso, an uncle of
the missing man, appealed to the community to help find Diaz Beoto, 33.
Diaz Alfonso, of Homestead, learned of the incident and of his nephew's disappearance in a phone call from
the missing man's sister, Taily Diaz Beoto, who lives in Italy and is visiting Cuba with her Italian husband.
"My niece told me that Leosbelito (Diaz Beoto) was missing and to call 911," said Diaz Alfonso. "I called and was told that the incident had happened in Cuba."
On Friday, Sanchez said he contacted the U.S. Coast Guard spokesperson in Miami who confirmed that they had received a call about a sunken boat and that they reported the incident to the Cuban Coast Guard.