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💔 La ESPOSA de OCHOA 35 AÑOS Después | Por Qué NUNCA Habló Del FUSILAMIENTO

 

July 13, 1989. Havana, Cuba.  Three men are executed by firing squad. General Arnaldo Ochoa, hero of Angola, the most decorated military officer in Cuba.  And among the spectators forced to witness the execution is a woman, Maida Ochoa, 45, the general’s wife for 23 years.  She is forced to watch her husband being shot, and after that day Maida disappears.

Not literally, but from the public eye. For 35 years, Maida Ochoa has never given an interview, never spoken publicly, never told her side of the story.  Because?  What did they do to silence her for so long?  How did the widow of Cuba’s greatest traitor survive ?  And what does she know that the regime doesn’t want her to say?  Stay with me because what we are going to analyze today is the longest silence in recent Cuban history .

  I’m going to explain who Maida was before she became a traitor’s widow .  I’m going to tell you about that brutal day of the execution, and what will shock you the most is that the regime has kept it silenced for 35 years.  Maida Ochoa was born in 1944 in Santiago de Cuba, into a middle-class military family.  His father was an army officer, his mother a devoted housewife.

Maida grew up in a disciplined environment, with traditional values, basic education, not university, but intelligent and dedicated.   In 1966 he met Arnaldo Ochoa at a military event in Santiago.  He is 30 years old, and is already a promising officer in the revolutionary army. She is 22 years old, beautiful, serious, and has the demeanor of a strong woman.

  Arnaldo is impressed not only by her beauty, but by her character.  In months of courtship, Arnaldo sees in Maida what he needs, a wife who can endure life.  military, because being a military wife in revolutionary Cuba is not easy.  Long absences, dangerous missions, constant uncertainty, but Maida accepts.

  He married that same year, 1966, a marriage that would last 23 years until death did him part. The early years 1966 to 1975. During this decade, Maida learns what it means to be a military wife. Arnaldo is constantly on missions, months, sometimes years away.  Venezuela is helping guerrillas, Nicaragua is training Sandinistas, and Maida is waiting at home with the children who are being born.

Three children in total, two boys and one girl.  She raises them practically on her own. Arnaldo is an absent father, not by choice, but due to military duty. Imagine that life for a moment.  Your husband is leaving for 6 months.  There are no daily calls, just occasional letters.

  You don’t know if he’s alive, you don’t know if he’ll come back.  And in the meantime, you raise children alone, pay bills, and maintain a home.  That was Maida’s life for years.  But she didn’t complain; she was a revolutionary wife.  The sacrifice was expected.  The Angola years, 1975 to 1988, Arnaldo is sent to Angola, a mission that will turn him into a hero.

  For 13 years, Arnaldo led Cuban troops in a brutal war.  Thousands of Cubans die in Angola, but Arnaldo survives and wins crucial battles. 1984. Arnaldo returns temporarily, receives the title of Hero of the Republic of Cuba, the highest decoration.  Only a handful of military personnel have received her, and Maida is there proudly.

  Her husband is now a legend.  Finally, after years of sacrifice, recognition. The privileged life 1985 to 1989. Arnaldo is now one of the most powerful generals in Cuba and that means privileges for the family.  Big house in Miramar, an exclusive military neighborhood. Access to specialty stores that sell imported products.

  Assigned car, occasional driver.  The children in better schools.  A guaranteed future in the armed forces if they want it.  It’s not obscene luxury like Fidel’s, but it’s a life far above that of the average Cuban.  Maida attends official events with Arnaldo, dinners with other generals and their wives. Receptions at embassies, diplomatic functions.

   It’s a life that millions of Cubans would envy, and Maida enjoys it.  After 20 years of sacrifice, he finally has stability.  Their children are growing up well.  Her husband is respected. Their future is secure.  Or so he thinks.  Because in May 1989 everything collapsed.  May 1989. Arnaldo Ochoa is suddenly arrested.

Maida doesn’t understand what’s happening. Officers arrive at his house.  Her husband has been arrested on serious charges.  He will come with us for questioning. Maida thinks, “It must be a mistake. Arnaldo is a hero, he’s loyal, but it’s not a mistake. I’m going to explain exactly what Maida went through during those two nightmarish months.

 May, June, 1989, the interrogation. Maida is interrogated multiple times. Did you know about your husband’s activities ?”  He mentioned contacts with drug traffickers.   Did you participate in any suspicious meetings?  Maida answers honestly.  I don’t know what they’re talking about.  Arnaldo never spoke to me about anything illegal.

  But the interrogators don’t believe him or don’t care because at that moment Maida is also a suspect.  His house is searched, his belongings checked, his phone tapped, and his children are also questioned.  What did you know about your father’s work?  Have you ever seen anything strange?  It’s a Cafquian Nightmare.

  The entire family is under suspicion.  June 1989. The public trial.  The trial is being broadcast on national television. All of Cuba is watching, and Maida is forced to attend.  In the front row she sees her 23-year-old husband in uniform, sitting in the dock as a criminal.  He hears accusations he cannot believe. Drug trafficking, conspiracy, treason.

Arnaldo defends himself weakly.  Her voice sounds defeated.  It’s obvious to Maida that something is wrong.  This is not the Arnaldo you know.  He has been psychologically broken, tortured, perhaps definitively threatened. Maida wants to scream.  This is a lie.  My husband is a hero.  But he can’t.  She is surrounded by guards.

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