https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2020/11/26/in-my-heart-i-am-palestinian-maradona-backed-palestine-cause

Maradona has been hailed as an anti-imperialist, left-wing socialist, who has supported progressive movements. He counted among his friends the late Venezuelan leader Hugo Chavez, Cuba’s late President Fidel Castro, and Bolivia’s Evo Morales. He was seen on more than one occasion accompanying Chavez, wearing an anti-George Bush shirt.

He unapologetically supported Palestine, even after hanging up his football boots. Hamas spokesman Sami Abu Zuhri tweeted his condolences to Maradona’s family and fans across the world. “We are so sad for the death of one of the greatest footballers, ‘Maradona’, who is known for his support of the #Palestine cause,” he wrote.

In 2012, Maradona described himself as “the number one fan of the Palestinian people”. “I respect them and sympathise with them,” he said. “I support Palestine without any fear.” Two years later, during Israel’s summer offensive on the besieged Gaza Strip that killed at least 3,000 Palestinians, Maradona expressed his outrage and criticised Israel. “What Israel is doing to the Palestinians is shameful,” he said in a statement.

A year later, reports circulated that Maradona was in negotiations with the Palestinian Football Association over the possibility of coaching the Palestinian national team during the 2015 AFC Asian Cup. In July 2018, he met Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas during a short meeting in Moscow, again reiterating his long-standing support for Palestinians. “In my heart, I am Palestinian,” he told Abbas as he embraced him in a clip that was uploaded on his Instagram page.

In the same year, Maradona expressed his opinions on the US’s role in Syria, which was in its seventh year of civil war as President Bashar al-Assad consolidated his control over the majority of the country. “You don’t need to go to university to know that the United States wants to wipe Syria out of existence,” he said.

  • Redcuban1959 [any]
    ·
    11 months ago

    Maradona appeared on a talk show hosted by the Venezuelan president (Hugo Chavez), who was also critical of the U.S. "I hate everything that comes from the United States. I hate it with all my strength," Maradona said to audience applause.

    It wasn't the first time he'd criticized the U.S. or then-President George W. Bush. In 2005, he donned a "Stop Bush" t-shirt (with the "s" in "Bush" written as a swastika) to protest the president's visit to Argentina. "I'm proud as an Argentine to repudiate the presence of this human trash, George Bush," he said according to The Guardian.

    A decade after appearing on Chavez's show, Maradona still voiced concerns about the U.S. During an appearance in Russia, he likened President Donald Trump to "a cartoon character," but praised Russian President Vladimir Putin as a leader on par with Chavez and Castro. "I think that after Chavez and Fidel, Putin–together with [Nicaraguan President Daniel] Ortega and [then-Bolivian President] Evo [Morales], represent the 'top league' of political leaders," he said in 2017, according to Russian outlet RT.