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    Default Re: Turmoil in Cuba

    https://multipolarista.com/2022/11/0...uba-us-israel/

    Entire world votes 185 to 2 against blockade of Cuba – US and Israel are rogue states at UN

    2022-11-03

    For the 30th year in a row, almost every country on Earth voted at the United Nations to oppose the six-decade US blockade of Cuba.

    On November 3, the UN General Assembly voted an overwhelming 185 to two to condemn Washington’s suffocating embargo

    The only countries that supported the illegal blockade were the United States itself and the Israeli apartheid regime.

    Just two nations abstained: Brazil’s far-right Jair Bolsonaro administration, and the NATO client regime in Ukraine.

    Moreover, the real number of member states that would have voted against the blockade is 186. However, Venezuela was unable to do so because its UN voting rights were temporarily suspended, due to Venezuela’s inability to pay member fees to the United Nations, ironically because of the illegal US blockade and sanctions against it.

    There are 193 members states of the United Nations. This means that 96% of the countries on Earth voted to condemn the US blockade of Cuba.

    In June 2021, the vote was almost exactly the same. The only difference was that Colombia’s previous right-wing government had abstained, whereas its new left-wing President Gustavo Petro opposes the blockade.

    Explicitly stated goal of US blockade: ‘to weaken the economic life of Cuba’ and ‘bring about hunger, desperation and overthrow of government’

    The US embargo was officially declared in 1962, but in reality Washington began imposing illegal unilateral sanctions almost immediately after the victory of the Cuban Revolution in 1959.

    Why has the United States waged such relentless economic war on Cuba for so many decades? An internal State Department memo from 1960 clearly explains Washington’s imperial intentions.

    In the document, Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for Inter-American Affairs Lester D. Mallory admitted that the “majority of Cubans support [Fidel] Castro” and there “is no effective political opposition.”

    “The only foreseeable means of alienating internal support is through disenchantment and disaffection based on economic dissatisfaction and hardship,” he concluded.

    The top State Department official insisted that “every possible means should be undertaken promptly to weaken the economic life of Cuba.”

    Washington’s goal, Mallory wrote, was to make “the greatest inroads in denying money and supplies to Cuba, to decrease monetary and real wages, to bring about hunger, desperation and overthrow of government.”

    On October 28, there was a similar UN General Assembly vote in which the United States and apartheid Israel once again showed themselves to be rogue states on the international stage. An overwhelming 152 member states voted against just five to tell Israel to give up its illegal nuclear weapons and abide by the Non-Proliferation Treaty.

    UN commission: US blockade has starved Cuba of $144.4 billion and is ‘the most severe and prolonged system of unilateral coercive measures ever applied against any country’

    In the 2022 General Assembly resolution, the UN Development Program (UNDP) stated clearly that the US “embargo limited the acquisition of medicines and medical equipment and supplies, it affects the external economic relations of Cuba, and its impact can be observed in all spheres of the country’s social and economic activities.”

    “The embargo has an impact on the population’s most vulnerable groups and on human development in general,” the UNDP wrote, adding that it “affects opportunities for national and local development and creates economic hardship for the population.”

    The UN body cited official estimates that the illegal US blockade caused Cuba’s economy to lose $144.4 billion from the early 1960s to 2020.

    In the resolution, the UN Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC) added that the US blockade also affect third countries and companies, not just Cuba, writing, “The embargo imposes strict limitations on the Caribbean nation, with extraterritorial effects that hinder its relations with third countries and affect the well-being of the Cuban population.”

    The UN commission noted that the Donald Trump administration imposed an additional 240 unilateral sanctions on Cuba, and that the Joe Biden administration has renewed the criminal economic measures.

    “The numerous United States sanctions produce real harm that obstructs the access of Cuban citizens to basic goods and violates their rights,” the UN ECLAC wrote. “These policies are an obstacle to economic, social and environmental development.”

    “In short, the numerous United States sanctions constitute the most severe and prolonged system of unilateral coercive measures ever applied against any country and continue to hinder the development of the potential of the Cuban economy,” the UN commission concluded.

    United Nations bodies condemn the illegal US blockade for harming Cubans

    The UN resolution A/76/405, officially titled “Necessity of ending the economic, commercial and financial embargo imposed by the United States of America against Cuba,” was voted on at the 77th session of the 28th plenary meeting of the General Assembly.

    The document received more than 170 pages of responses from dozens of member states and UN bodies explaining why Washington must end its illegal blockade.

    Numerous international organizations explained how the US embargo greatly harms the Cuban population as a whole.

    The UN Development Program wrote:

    In pandemic conditions, the embargo remains in place, and its negative impact has been more specific and significantly larger than in previous years, particularly on commerce and financial activities.

    The embargo limited the acquisition of medicines and medical equipment and supplies, it affects the external economic relations of Cuba, and its impact can be observed in all spheres of the country’s social and economic activities.

    The embargo also maintains the restrictions on the use of the United States dollar and on imports from Cuba. It affects opportunities for national and local development and creates economic hardship for the population.

    The embargo has an impact on the population’s most vulnerable groups and on human development in general.

    According to official estimates, the cumulative direct and indirect losses for the Cuban economy owing to the embargo from the early 1960s until March 2020 amount to $144.4 billion at current prices.

    The UN Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean wrote:

    During the Administration of President Donald Trump, over 240 coercive measures were activated against Cuba in the framework of the United States embargo against the island, and these still remain in force.

    In fact, on 7 September 2021, the President of the United States, Joseph Biden, extended the law regulating the embargo against Cuba under the so-called Trading with the Enemy Act, until 14 September 2022.

    In a memorandum addressed to the Secretary of State and the Secretary of the Treasury, the President ordered the extension of the sanctions that heavily limit trade with Cuba under these rules. Former President Trump had renewed these in September 2020.

    The embargo imposes strict limitations on the Caribbean nation, with extraterritorial effects that hinder its relations with third countries and affect the well-being of the Cuban population. These restrictions deepen the multiple challenges imposed on the island by the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic and multiply its adverse socioeconomic, health and financial effects. On several occasions, they have hindered the arrival of humanitarian aid in Cuba.



    The numerous United States sanctions produce real harm that obstructs the access of Cuban citizens to basic goods and violates their rights. These policies are an obstacle to economic, social and environmental development.



    In short, the numerous United States sanctions constitute the most severe and prolonged system of unilateral coercive measures ever applied against any country and continue to hinder the development of the potential of the Cuban economy.

    The International Labor Organization (ILO) wrote:

    The embargo has intensified in recent years and has significantly constrained development possibilities in Cuba, greatly impacting the living conditions of the Cuban people. Among the effects, just to name a few:

    • Restrictions on the transfer of remittances still imply a higher indirect tax burden on salaries legitimately earned abroad and sent for household spending on basic human needs such as food, clothing, education, housing, water and sanitation.

    • Limitations on commerce and financial transactions still represent a serious bottleneck and an additional cost for business development and job creation, especially in sectors like agriculture and tourism, as decent work largely depends on productive investment and access to financing.

    • Limited access to technology transfer implies further difficulties for enterprises, as well as for social and economic development.

    The implementation of Title III of the Helms-Burton Act intensifies the embargo by affecting business and investment opportunities in Cuba for third-country investors; the creation of new job sources; and decent work in Cuba.

    The direct and indirect effects of the embargo on the Cuban economy and people affect not only the enterprises, but even more their workers and the population in general. The International Labour Organization (ILO) is particularly concerned about the impacts on children, workers and the elderly. Ending the embargo would turn the overall loss into an opportunity for productive investment, employment generation and new business opportunities, as well as for achieving the Plan Nacional de Desarrollo Económico y Social hasta 2030 and other reforms aimed at improving the economic and social system, for example monetary unification and the expansion of self-employment schemes.

    In the context of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic recovery, the embargo is limiting the possibilities for the country to implement jobs and economic recovery strategies.

    The UN Food and Agricultural Organization (FAO) wrote:

    Given that Cuba is subject to an embargo, projects implemented by FAO in the country are affected with regard to the procurement of equipment and supplies that complement the technical assistance because the resources that could be imported from the United States have to be imported from far more distant markets, at much higher prices and higher freight costs. If acquisitions could be made in the United States, it would be much cheaper and more activities could be supported through the available budget.

    The most recent embargo measures against Cuba, under which third-country companies trading with Cuba can be sued in United States courts, have had a negative impact on Cuban trade by drastically reducing the commercial partners that operate in the country. This has had a direct impact on the procurement operations that FAO carries out in Cuba in the framework of its technical cooperation projects.



    Under the embargo, conditions hinder the processes of payments and banking transactions to and from suppliers who provide services for cooperation projects and to the FAO country office. This is demonstrated by banks’ rejections of transfers from FAO for sales to Cuba; the impossibility for suppliers to offer products to Cuba obtained from other North American companies; and the inability of suppliers to transfer funds to Cuba for payment of services contracted in the country.

    In addition, banks reject commercial and financial transactions by Cuban enterprises in United States dollars and in other currencies, which hinders payment for certifications of Cuban products with a high potential to be commercialized in Europe.

    FAO staff continue to be affected by expensive and long formalities in banking processes.

    A summary of the negative effects caused by the embargo in some of the sectors in which FAO is providing technical support and other sectors included within its country programming framework is presented below.

    The losses originated mainly in:

    (a) Price differences owing to changes in the import market;

    (b) Additional costs related to freight insurance;

    (c) Additional costs owing to a freeze of assets;

    (d) Monetary damages;

    (e) Losses owing to lack of access to the latest technology from the United States;

    (f) Relocation of exports.

    The Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) wrote:

    the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) continued to express concern regarding the negative impact that extraterritorial sanctions have on human rights.



    Seven United Nations human rights experts reiterated this in a message, requesting the United States of America to lift its economic and financial embargo on Cuba that is obstructing humanitarian responses to help the country’s health-care system fight the COVID-19 pandemic.



    Particular difficulties were reported in countries subject to unilateral coercive measures, including Cuba, to obtain medical equipment vital to fight the pandemic, including oxygen supply and ventilators, protective kits and spare -parts software



    The Human Rights Council expressed its grave concern that, in some countries, such measures impede the full realization of social and economic development and hinder the well-being of the populations, with particular consequences for women, children, the elderly and persons with disabilities.



    the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights reiterated her call for the lifting of unilateral sectoral sanctions, given their negative impact on human rights, including the right to health.



    four mandate holders of the Special Procedure of the Human Rights Council stressed that unilateral sanctions impinge on the right to development and called on countries that impose unilateral sanctions to withdraw or at least to minimize them to guarantee that the rule of law and human rights, including the right to development, are not affected.

    They explicitly referred to Cuba as a targeted country and pointed out that owing to the unilateral sanctions some countries sink into poverty because they cannot get essential services like electricity, housing, water, gas and fuel, let alone medicine and food.



    the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights noted that sanctions can create severe and undue suffering for individuals who have neither perpetrated crimes nor otherwise bear responsibility for improper conduct. When sanctions target an entire country, or address entire economic sectors, it is the most vulnerable people in that country – those who are least protected – who are likely to be worst harmed.
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    Default Re: Turmoil in Cuba

    https://x.com/UN_News_Centre/status/1720108511735009598



    https://x.com/GeromanAT/status/1720116035645304832


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    Default Re: Turmoil in Cuba

    https://x.com/pawelwargan/status/1763496272722284911

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    Default Re: Turmoil in Cuba

    Text:
    Cuba received a ship from Russia with more than 90,000 tons of oil to ease the energy crisis.

    Cuba's Ministry of Energy and Mining said the ship had arrived at the Matanzas base in the west of the country and would be the second shipment of crude oil from Moscow to Havana after the one sent on March 17, which delivered 31,000 tons of crude oil worth almost $50 million.

    Cuba is experiencing an energy crisis, reflected in power outages, which is likely to subside in the coming days. - FRWL reports

    https://x.com/djuric_zlatko/status/1775226785900208144

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    Default Re: Turmoil in Cuba

    Text:
    Cubans are chanting “power and food” during protests due to power outages and food shortages throughout #Cuba. 🗣️🪧

    Cubans are without power for up to #10hours a day. #AbelSantamaria resident #YoniMena told Reuters, “Living without electricity is primitive.… The mosquitoes, the heat, sometimes there is no water. People are losing their minds. And that leads to other problems, like violence.” 👀

    Santiago’s Luz Perez stated, “I love Cuba. But this situation is terrible. No one can live like this.”

    #News #trendingnews #TheNewAmericanMagazine #TheNewAmerican #cubanos #Cubans #FoodShortages #BreakingNews #trendingtopic #TrendingNow2024 #Viral #fypviraltwitter

    https://x.com/NewAmericanMag/status/1773031386728829275



    https://thenewamerican.com/news/powe...tests-in-cuba/


    Power and Food Shortages Spark Protests in Cuba

    Cubans are chanting “power and food” during protests due to power outages and food shortages throughout Cuba.

    Cubans are without power for up to 10 hours a day. Abel Santamaria resident Yoni Mena told Reuters, “Living without electricity is primitive.… The mosquitoes, the heat, sometimes there is no water. People are losing their minds. And that leads to other problems, like violence.” Santiago’s Luz Perez stated, “I love Cuba. But this situation is terrible. No one can live like this.”

    Cuban President Miguel Díaz-Canel blamed U.S. sanctions, telling NBC News, “We are free, sovereign and independent, and we are going to continue building our revolution, despite the tightening of the blockade, despite the fact that we have been included on a spurious list that can only be invented by a government as genocidal and as hegemonic as the government of the United States.”

    Díaz-Canel accused the U.S. blockade of being genocidal, stating on X, “We thank the people of Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, and our brother Ralph Gonsalves, for the donation of flour they sent to #Cuba to help alleviate the difficult situation we face as a result of #BloqueoGenocida from the United States government. #CubaNoEstáSola”
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    Default Re: Turmoil in Cuba

    Text:
    🇨🇺The US blockade of Cuba has plunged the country into darkness.

    As of Friday, October 18, Cuba has been suffering an unprecedented national blackout. The cause of this is the lack of fuel and maintenance to keep the electrical grid operating properly. Cuba has been severely restricted from purchasing fuel and crucial supplies because of the tight US blockade on the country. Cuban officials have repeatedly called for Washington to lift some of these suffocating sanctions (and the blockade as a whole) and allow the country to purchase lifesaving supplies, yet once again their pleas have fallen on deaf ears.

    Read the account of this blackout from journalist
    @ldejesusreyes
    , direct from Havana.

    📸 Luis de Jesús.


    https://x.com/peoplesdispatch/status...94108619346351



    https://x.com/camilapress/status/1848418424613171307




    https://peoplesdispatch.org/2024/10/...-not-defeated/


    Cuba, in the dark but not defeated

    The following is a personal account of the blackout in Cuba by journalist Laura Prada.

    It has been more than 72 hours without electricity. The last time I spent so many days without electricity was in Venezuela, in March 2020, when an attack on the national electric power system left the country without electricity for a week.

    The origin was the same: a tangled regime of sanctions and blockade; the refusal of a powerful country to accept the will of independent peoples determined to forge their own path.

    At that time we were on the ground, informing Venezuela and the world about what was happening there, regardless of sleep, hunger, fatigue….

    Today, four years later, a similar attack, a consequence of a blockade put in place more than 60 years ago, has caused Cuba’s electric power system to collapse and disconnect the country from one end to the other. Just as then, we are ready for whatever comes. The only worry, now we have a three-year-old child in our care.

    The fire you have inside to go out and show what is happening burns you. You feel that the walls of the house oppress you. You know that your duty is to inform and go out to dismantle the lies that are being constructed about what is happening. Meanwhile, I hear in the background the occasional casserole pan looking for others to join in a chorus and the cries of those who bet on the lottery and lost.

    A “Mom, I want water” breaks the lethargy. I run to the kitchen to satisfy the thirst of Ernesto, the three-year-old who has been asking for two days “what time does the power come back on?”

    Outside it rains and the wind swirls, I go back to the living room to check that no water enters, I go back to check that the food is not burning, I climb to the top of a ladder to look for signal and data. In the distance I hear the echoes of power plants. They say that the island is gradually lighting up. A map with green and yellow dots circulates in social networks and is shared in groups.

    Uncertainty sometimes takes over me, the desire to go out and tell what is happening outside is overshadowed, annulled, in light of the greater responsibility of protecting that child. While he rests, I resume my tour of the house in search of a point of connectivity.

    There is something that does not leave my mind and I have been repeating it for hours. This is the reality of the f***ing Yankee blockade. This is one of its many faces and today we are looking it in the eye.

    For more than 72 hours Cuba is in the dark, but not defeated.

    Down with the blockade! Carajo

    Laura Prada is a Cuban journalist based in Havana.

    ¤=[Post Update]=¤

    https://x.com/KawsachunNews/status/1848815015232442407

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    Default Re: Turmoil in Cuba

    https://x.com/carantosan/status/1849190543500480757

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    Default Re: Turmoil in Cuba

    https://x.com/peoplesdispatch/status...18340933476848



    https://peoplesdispatch.org/2024/10/...ropical-storm/

    Power is gradually restored in Cuba, Hurricane Oscar downgraded to tropical storm
    After several false starts over the weekend, the efforts to recover Cuba’s electrical system began to make headway on October 21. Meanwhile, authorities have declared that Oscar has become a tropical storm.

    Following a severe collapse of the national power grid on October 18, Cuba continues to make great efforts to restore electrical service to all homes and institutions on the island.

    The Electric Company of the capital, Havana, reported that close to 90% of the clients in the capital have been reconnected and announced that “There will be no rest until the Electric System is fully restored.”

    In this regard, President Miguel Dïaz-Canel said “We were at the National Load Dispatch since very early in the morning. The microsystems in the country are being strengthened and Havana is gradually receiving energy. It is a complex job, but we are taking sure steps. We said that we will not rest until the total reestablishment.”

    In other parts of the country, reconnections continue while attempts are made to repair the damages suffered by the thermoelectric power plants, which, due to the difficulties of access to spare parts and technological elements that help to repower the system (caused fundamentally by the criminal economic blockade suffered by Cuba on the part of the US government), the repair tasks are very complicated.

    Tropical Storm Oscar

    Amid the critical situation with the collapse of the power grid, Hurricane Oscar made landfall on the Caribbean Island late on Sunday. Fortunately for the inhabitants of eastern Cuba, the storm downgraded its intensity and hit the island as a tropical storm, though still unleashing heavy rains and wind in the eastern region. The level of damage that Oscar can produce is still uncertain.

    According to experts, the storm is now headed to the Bahamas, though authorities have called on the population to not lower their guard and to be alert to official communication channels.

    The world stands with Cuba

    Amid Cuba’s blackout, the member states of the Bolivarian Alliance of the Peoples of Our America (ALBA-TCP), expressed in a communiqué their support to the Cuban government and offered their help to overcome the difficult times the island is going through: “The complex situation that [Cuba] is experiencing today is a consequence of the economic war, financial persecution and [the refusal to sell] fuel supplies by the US administration, which seeks to asphyxiate Cuba in its commitment to the well-being of the Cuban people”.

    Furthermore, the communiqué adds “The policy of maximum pressure through unilateral coercive measures and the blockade against the nation is cruel and inhuman and has been categorically rejected by the majority of the countries of the world, since […] it only seeks a change of regime, in open violation of the purposes and principles of the United Nations Charter and the norms of International Law.”

    In a press conference on October 21, the spokesperson of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of China, Lin Jian, also expressed support to Cuba as it faces unprecedented challenges, “[The] US blockade on Cuba has been catastrophic for Cuba’s socioeconomic development and people’s lives. China once again calls on the US to fully lift the blockade and sanctions on Cuba at once and remove Cuba from the list of ‘state sponsors of terrorism.’”

    In a statement, the platform of social movements of Latin America and the Caribbean, ALBA Movimientos, categorized the current situation on the island as one of “anguish and tension, a product of the suffering induced by the criminal blockade.” ALBA Movimientos argues that the US-imposed blockade ultimately seeks to “undermine the role of the Cuban State in satisfying the basic needs of the population, while trying to privilege an incipient private sector, incapable by its condition of providing the levels and extent of social justice achieved by the Revolution.”

    In the statement, the movements also warn that this latest episode of blockade-induced hardship on the island could be seized upon by reactionary, counter-revolutionary forces. “At this moment, all the psychological pressure apparatus is being used to induce a social outburst of unforeseeable consequences, using as a basis and pretext the legitimate expressions of social unrest resulting from the current situation, its accumulated and possible solutions,” it warns.

    The only viable solution which would respect the sovereignty of Cuba and guarantee the possibility of dignified life, is the immediate and irreversible lifting of the blockade on Cuba, concludes ALBA.

    Meanwhile, the White House spokesperson Karine Jean-Pierre claimed in a press conference on October 21, that the US is “not to blame for the blackouts on the island or the overall energy situation in Cuba.”
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    Default Re: Turmoil in Cuba

    https://x.com/peoplesdispatch/status...62397378785653



    https://peoplesdispatch.org/2024/10/...ing-sanctions/

    Amid Cuba’s blackouts, activists urge Biden to reverse devastating sanctions
    Open letter in New York Times urges Biden to reverse Trump-era sanctions against the socialist state

    Cuba solidarity activists, organized by the People’s Forum, published an open letter today in the New York Times, urging US President Biden to overturn devastating Trump-era sanctions on Cuba. This letter comes as the island is experiencing blackouts driven by the energy crisis—the direct result of such sanctions.

    “Cuba is currently experiencing a nationwide blackout, exacerbated by the cruel sixty-year-long US embargo,” the letter reads. “This embargo has prevented the country from purchasing fuel, accessing essential goods, and obtaining spare parts for its power grid- leaving millions of people in the dark.”

    Next week, the UN will take its annual vote to lift the US blockade against Cuba, which historically has resulted in UN member nations voting nearly unanimously against the blockade. Last year, 187 nations voted for a UN resolution to end the over-60-year-long blockade. The only states to vote against the resolution were the US and Israel. Ukraine was the only state to abstain.

    Biden has upheld former president Trump’s harsh measures against Cuba, which reversed Obama-era policies towards normalization. These include maintaining Cuba on the US’s list of State Sponsors of Terrorism, as well as Trump’s 243 additional sanctions against the socialist state.

    “In the past sixty years, the embargo has cost over $164 billion in damages, with more than $5 billion in losses in the last year alone (March 2023-February 2024). Each year, the United States stands virtually alone before the UN General Assembly as the word condemns this policy,” the letter states.

    “This devastating blackout is just one aspect of the United States’ legacy of facilitating suffering on the island through the embargo. Trump’s brutal policy should be reversed. It’s not too late to do the right thing.”
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    Default Re: Turmoil in Cuba

    https://x.com/peoplesdispatch/status...12202438389802




    https://x.com/peoplesdispatch/status...12530521006403

    Last edited by Ravenlocke; 24th October 2024 at 18:12.
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    Default Re: Turmoil in Cuba

    Cuba is having a hellish time of it lately - blackouts, hurricanes and now 2 earthquakes:

    6.8 magnitude earthquake shakes Cuba after hurricanes and blackouts



    Quote HAVANA (AP) — An earthquake with a preliminary magnitude of 6.8 shook eastern Cuba on Sunday, after weeks of hurricanes and blackouts that have left many on the island reeling.
    Shaking felt in Florida after powerful earthquakes strike off Cuba’s coast

    Quote MIAMI – Residents in Florida reported feeling the ground move after two powerful earthquakes struck off the coast of Cuba late Sunday morning, prompting brief fears that a tsunami could impact areas closest to the epicenter in the Caribbean.

    According to the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS), the two earthquakes were reported within an hour of each other.

    The first was a magnitude 5.9 that was reported just before 11 a.m. ET approximately 22 miles south of Bartolomé Masó, Cuba, at a depth of about 9 miles.

    The second earthquake, which was the stronger of the two, was reported an hour later just before noon ET. That earthquake was a magnitude 6.8 and was centered about 25 miles south of Bartolomé Masó at a depth of about 8 miles.

    Shortly after the second earthquake was reported, the National Weather Service Pacific Tsunami Warning Center (PTWC) in Honolulu issued an alert stating that while there was no significant threat of a tsunami, "there is a very small possibility of tsunami waves along coasts nearest to the epicenter."
    Last edited by arwen; 10th November 2024 at 22:41.

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    Default Re: Turmoil in Cuba

    🇷🇺🇨🇺 Russia to Begin Diesel Fuel Deliveries to Cuba

    Cuba and Russia are set to strengthen their partnership with an imminent contract for diesel fuel supplies, according to Cuban Ambassador to Russia Julio Antonio Garmendia Pena. Speaking to Sputnik, the ambassador confirmed that the agreement has been finalized, with deliveries expected to begin in the coming days.

    The deal will provide Cuba with 80,000 tonnes of diesel fuel worth $60 million, aiding the island’s recovery from its recent hurricane-induced energy crisis. This development follows Russian Deputy Prime Minister Dmitry Chernyshenko’s November 2024 announcement of Moscow’s commitment to supporting Cuba’s energy stability in challenging times.

    ❗️This is more than just a fuel contract, it’s a signal of solidarity. As Washington tightens its sanctions noose, Moscow and Havana are writing the next chapter in a long-standing alliance built on resilience and defiance. While the empire isolates, the multipolar world bridges gaps, delivering lifelines where others sow chaos.

    @TheIslanderNews

    https://x.com/peacemaket71/status/1875940241338437665

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    Default Re: Turmoil in Cuba

    https://x.com/TheGrayzoneNews/status...56184423973000





    https://thegrayzone.com/2025/01/01/c...-survive-2025/

    Will the Cuban revolution survive the storm of 2025?
    Danny ShawJanuary 1, 2025

    Danny Shaw has been traveling to Cuba since 1995 in support of the country’s socialist revolution. Unsatisfied with the official proclamations and guided tours for international leftists, he embarked on a project of first-hand ethnographic research across the country over the decades. With a command of Cuban Spanish, Shaw wandered off the beaten path, independently evaluating conditions in the country. Surveying the perspectives of some of the most marginalized populations in Havana, he assesses their responses to the US unilateral blockade and Cuba’s isolation.

    On Jan. 1, Cuba officially joined the international grouping known as BRICS, as one of 13 nations incorporated as “partner states.” The date, which coincides with the 66th anniversary of the triumph of their revolution, could mark a turning point for the beleaguered socialist state. But unless the country’s leaders embrace a strategic fiscal shift in the face of an asphyxiating US blockade, the prospect of state collapse – and the unraveling of over a half century of revolutionary social development – can not be dismissed.

    “Ataca Sabroso” (Attack With Sweetness)

    Throughout my decades of firsthand research in Cuba, few figures seemed to embody the revolution — and all its contradictions — like “Sumy,” the boxer. A slender 6′ 2,” at 60 years old, he could still pass for 39. Known for a long, stiff jab that snapped heads back, the retired fighter turned long-time high school principal still has his dazzling punching combinations. For two decades, Jesús Miguel Rodríguez Muro, known by his nickname Sumy, glided through cruiserweight boxing competitions across Cuba. Internationally, he made a name for himself as well, fighting in the Soviet Union and other Warsaw Pact countries.

    A dedicated member of the Cuban Communist Party, Sumy resides in Arroyo Naranjo, an outer municipality of Havana. The retired athlete lived as all Cubans do: modestly. During a recent visit, his feet swung off a small ramshackle bed. He had a collection of books and notebooks stacked on a bookshelf that was on its last leg. His bedroom, which moonlit as a living room, was furnished with a tiny TV straight out of the 1980s and a transistor radio that one might see in a Vietnam war movie. At night time, when hunger stirred and no protein was available, Sumy grabbed two pieces of cheap cake and tossed them into an empty loaf of bread. He devoured the make-shift stuffed gyro, winking at his boxing students: “Sabroso, sabroso!”

    US intelligence exploits Cuban youth’s malaise

    The Cuban Revolution once guaranteed every citizen health care, education and basic social and economic rights. In Sumy’s case, the shift could be clearly delineated by generation. Sumy’s parents’ generation made the revolution. Sumy’s generation benefited from the social transformation and fortified it. But Sumy’s children’s generation, who came of age in the 1990s, have had a different experience. In the words of one mother and communist militant in Marianao: “The new generation has only lived in a period of sacrifice and more sacrifice. They don’t remember the struggle against Batista nor the first decade of the revolution, with those marvelous debates and experiments we had at that time. They only know austerity.”

    The collapse can be felt throughout Cuba’s economy, and perhaps nowhere more acutely than its critical sugar industry. Initially, collectivization proved immensely successful, with Cuba under Castro reaching a peak of 8.5 million metric tonnes of sugar between 1969 and 1970. In the early 90s, before the collapse of the Soviet Union, Cuban farmers still produced 7 million metric tons, accounting for a whopping 30% of global sugar exports. But the number fell by half virtually overnight as Cuba’s friends abroad disappeared, and continued to dwindle in the intervening years.

    The decline has become more pronounced in recent years, as the number of functioning sugar mills in Cuba has dropped to just 16, with US sanctions continuing to make repairs near-impossible. In 2019, the island managed to produce 1.3 million metric tons of sugar. By 2023, that number dropped to 350,000, with the island failing – for the first time since the 1800s – to produce enough sugar to provide for domestic consumption. As economist Juan Triana explained, it’s difficult to overstate the significance of the massive dropoff in sugar: “For more than 150 years, the industry of sugarcane was both the main export income and the locomotive for the rest of the economy. That’s what we’ve lost.”

    Tourism, which overtook sugar as Cuba’s top industry in 1997, has nearly evaporated in the same recent span. Following the appearance of COVID, the island’s visitors dropped from over 4,000,000 per year to just 356,500 in 2021.

    Now, Cuba has neither the foreign revenue nor a self-reliant economy to feed its people. The island has been teetering on the brink of disaster since 1990; the start of the pandemic only exacerbated the situation. There are routine blackout crises. Gas shortages are frequent. A trip across Havana on public transportation can take three hours or more. Residents, fatigued by six and a half decades of a Cold War, are demanding “electricity and food.” The imperialist Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) forecasts that this reality will spurn more protests. Rations are down to a bare minimum and even those are often not available. According to one doctor and Cuban Communist Party leader known by his nom de guerre, Oldanier: “We live like Palestinians minus the bombing. Malnutrition is everywhere. Inflation has skyrocketed. The state cannot pay our salaries. Child mortality is way up. More and more people are fleeing.”

    Cuba, like many nations targeted by the US for regime change, has seen a major exodus in recent years, with nearly half a million Cubans – representing a full 5% of the Cuban population – reportedly attempting to immigrate to the United States between 2021 and 2023.

    The end of rations?

    Before the aggravated crisis that began with the pandemic, every month, each member of a household in Cuba received a monthly “canasta básica” (basic basket) consisting of an allotment of rice, chickpeas, black beans, cooking oil, salt, sugar, coffee, soap, bread, eggs, chicken, tobacco, and toothpaste. Now, residents complain that portions have dropped significantly, rice arrives late, and chicken has vanished, replaced by cans of potted meat. If a family wants fruit, vegetables, or anything beyond la libreta (the ration book), it is up to their own individual spending ability. Families describe the creative artform of stretching a meager amount of food for the entire month, with one explaining how they saved up extra eggs for New Years Eve in order to be able to give their children some type of treat that night.

    Cuba’s internationally-renowned medical sector, once the pride of Latin America, hasn’t been immune to the downturn either. “We cannot provide what is required for those with diabetes and other sick people,” one nurse lamented.

    Due to shortages deliberately caused by the intensification of the trade embargo, Cuba’s inflation rate is an astronomical 39.1%. Access to dollars is the only way many people can eat. They can access the private Micro and Small Enterprises stores (MYPIMES) which sell food and other products at prices pegged to the dollar and euro. This means that to buy a pound of chicken in “the free market,” a Cuban will spend up to 20 percent of their monthly salary. For two weeks of milk, they may spend two weeks of their salary. Many Communist Party vets say these are their worst economic conditions yet. One community leader lamented: “We don’t have medication. I am a diabetic. We just keep losing weight. Look at these 25 pounds I have lost. Carlos Lazo’s Bridges of Love (Puentes de Amor) program helps us but it is not enough.”

    With no indication that things will improve anytime soon, many Cubans – specifically, young adults – want out. Meanwhile, their blockaded futures provide fertile soil for the next color revolution attempt.

    The younger generation of Cubans are mostly singing a different tune than Sumy and the revolutionary old guard. US intelligence is doing all it can to exploit the resentments of those elements which USAID branded as “desocialized and marginalized youth” from Afro-Cuban communities. As Max Blumenthal reported for The Grayzone, US intelligence has invested millions in a Cultural Cold War-style program to boost counterrevolutionary rappers, artists and activists.

    The first wave of weaponized Cuban artists emerged from the so-called San Isidro Movement. I first met San Isidro founders Amaury Pacheco, Omni Zona Franca and some of the collective’s future activists in 2001 at poetry and music festivals in Alamar, Havana del Este. While these dreadlocked, anarchist-oriented performers claimed to be “non-ideological,” it was clear they were the kind of “dissidents” the CIA was courting to lead the counterrevolution. They were fiercely dedicated to toppling the Cuban state and eager to work with any foreigners who could help them travel internationally and advocate for a Western-style color revolution in Cuba.


    Destitution by design

    The destruction of Cuba’s economy represents an undeniable success of decades of US foreign policy. The Trump and Biden administrations ultimately remained faithful to the original objective of the 1960 blockade – as have those that preceded them, including that of Barack Obama, who only slightly tweaked certain stipulations restricting travel. A year after the revolution’s triumph, Eisenhower calculated: “If the Cuban people are hungry, they will throw Castro out.” Four months later, Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for Inter-American Affairs Lester D. Mallory agreed: “Every possible means should be undertaken promptly to weaken the economic life of Cuba… to bring about hunger, desperation and overthrow of the government.”

    Drafted in 1960, the US government’s “Program of Covert Action” continues to inform US policy towards Cuba. For six decades, the US has sought to suffocate and destroy Cuba’s self-determination.

    More than 3,400 Cubans have been killed by US state terrorism since the revolution. US intelligence plotted and organized 638 known attempts on Fidel Castro’s life. Biological warfare has been used such as the intentional infection of the island’s pig population with the swine virus. It is more difficult to calculate the human cost of sanctions. Hunger and migration are the two most common results. Over 200,000 Cubans have been forced to leave their homeland in the past year and a half, a figure even larger than previous migrations such as the Marielitos and the 1994 “rafters.”

    Every policy of today’s most powerful empire has been calculated and designed to inflict regime change in Cuba, a euphemism for the complete overhaul of class relations. Ignoring these external pressures, the legacy media hyper fixates on repression in Cuba instead. The constant threats, harassment and US intelligence-backed terrorist campaigns have successfully instilled a level of paranoia in Cuban leadership, which has had to focus precious resources on national security. This defensive posture plays right into the hands of Cuba’s would-be colonizers in Washington and Miami.

    Whether it is framed as Biden’s last hoorah or Trump’s opening salvo, the US national security elite, drunk off its genocidal rampage across the Middle East, still wants to overthrow the Cuban government. On the island, rumors swirl that the US is planning another San Isidro-style color revolution attempt in hopes of provoking state repression. This would naturally pave the way for Elon Musk-aligned influencers and the corporate media to frame “Communist Cuba” as a bastion of repression and provide Washington with a justification to finish off the recalcitrant state.

    Multipolarity: Cuba’s only hope

    The Cuban leadership, seasoned by six decades of resistance, is searching for a response to the hybrid war and its impact on morale. They respond as any fighter who is fighting above their weight does: aggressively and desperately. Now, it’s become clear that their only way to break the blockade is multipolarity.

    Visits back and forth between Chinese President Xi Jinping and his Cuban counterpart highlight Cuba’s increasing resolve to build up their own Chinese style competitive state companies which would put an end to the food shortages. Cuba hosted the Group of 77 last year, the largest international organization after the United Nations itself. 134 countries, or 80 percent of the world population, are currently represented in the now misnamed “Group of 77.” From Havana, chairman of the Group of 77, Cuban President Miguel Diaz-Canel, insisted: “After all this time that the North has organized the world according to its interests, it is now up to the South to change the rules of the game.” Cuba, along with 34 other countries, has applied for membership in BRICS. The addition of Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Ethiopia, the United Arab Emirates, Iran and Argentina (contested by the new president Milei) at the beginning of 2024, means the BRICS bloc nations now constitute 42% of the world’s population and account for 23% of gross domestic product and 18% of global trade. Cuba’s future does not run through Wall Street or the Beltway, it runs through Moscow, Beijing, Caracas, Tehran, Johannesburg and the other burgeoning centers of multipolarity.

    President Diaz-Canel visited Iran to discuss mutually-beneficial ways to break the embargoes. The Deputy President Salvador Valdés Mesa travelled to South Africa to strengthen diplomatic and economic ties. On May 9th, the 79th anniversary of the Soviet Day of Victory over Fascism, the Cuban president celebrated with Vladimir Putin in the Grand Kremlin Palace. Cuba hosted a fleet of Russian warships in its harbors, just 500 miles from nuclear-powered US attack submarines which continue to occupy Guantanamo Bay.

    One of Cuba’s most malicious enemies, incoming Cuban-American Secretary of State Marco Rubio, has warned of the shifting geopolitical dimensions. Alarmed by Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva’s multipolar instincts and his visits to Beijing and beyond, the neoconservative Florida senator appeared anxious on Fox News: “We won’t have to talk about sanctions in five years because there’ll be so many countries transacting in currencies other than the dollar that we won’t have the ability to sanction them.” Could the “sanction inability” theory, as the Chinese Global Times calls it, spell relief for the Cuban people or is it too late? In theory, Cuba should no longer be an isolated state standing on its own. So why is this not translating into relief for the Cuban people?

    Unfortunately for Cubans, you cannot yet feed your children nor fuel your cars with multipolarity. Capitalism demands instant gratification. And the average young Cuban knows there’s far more to be found in Miami than Havana.

    Argentinian sociologist Atilio Borón, analyzing the impact of Western sanctions on South American and Caribbean countries, explained that hunger was more dangerous than any weapons system that Washington could deploy. An air-tight blockade is inflicting acute hunger and despair on the over 11,000,000 people of Cuba. Supporters of Cuba and the leaders of the multipolar world have a responsibility to ask: Before the most powerful empire in history, how much longer can the revolution hold on?

    Late rounds in Cuba’s fight for survival

    There are two January showdowns shaping up in the Caribbean. On January 1st 2025, the 66th anniversary of the revolution, Cuba will officially become a member of BRICS. On January 20th, Donald Trump and his cabinet of billionaires will take state power in the United States. Trump enacted a further 243 coercive measures against Cuba when he assumed office in 2016. The Biden administration continued to tighten the noose around Cuba. The US has not recognized Nicolas Maduro, Cuba’s closest ally, as the president of Venezuela, instead designating right-wing opposition candidate Edmundo Gonzalez as the country’s leader. This sets up a clash for inauguration day in Caracas on January 10th, 2025—which the US is looking to exploit.

    This December, the Department of Defense signed an agreement with Trinidad and Tobago which allows them “to deploy forces to Trinidad and Tobago in the event of a “conflict” in Venezuela.” And another US-supported San Isidro-style color revolution attempt against Cuba is expected in the opening months of Trump’s second term.

    Fidel Castro highlighted the centrality of the ideological struggle, the showdown for the heart and soul of a people. On the 66th anniversary of the Cuban Revolution, many Habaneros are gripped with an acute sense that Western leftist tourists and solidarity activists have over-glorified their reality. Something has to give. Either the expanded BRICS nations will incorporate Cuba into their multipolar economic, political and diplomatic expansion or the vultures will finish Cuba off. There is no middle ground.

    Cuba’s fight for survival resembles the boxing career of Mohammed Ali. For the first three decades, the revolution was youthful, sharp, bold and invincible. Past generations of Cubans fought for Angola and Syria, stood with Grenada and the Sandinistas, admiring and emulating the heroes of the revolution. This generation faces hunger, despair and isolation, with the government outmatched by objective reality. With the collapse of the anti-capitalist rival pole of the Cold War era, Cuba has been left to fight on its own.

    Multipolarity may be on the rise, but as the Western-backed genocide in Gaza and the setbacks suffered by the Axis of Resistance show, US hegemony has proven resilient. As in Ali’s final rounds, exhausted, with its vulnerabilities exposed, the island nation still somehow miraculously pushes through, paying a long-term price as it weathers one punishing blow after another. Unlike a prize fighter, the descendants of José Martí and Fidel Castro do not have the option of giving up or retiring.
    Last edited by Ravenlocke; 14th January 2025 at 21:45.
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    Default Re: Turmoil in Cuba

    #Cuba | Foreign Affairs Minister Bruno Rodriguez rejected statements by United States Secretary of State Marco Rubio, who announced that his country would limit the granting of visas to countries that request Cuban doctors and health workers.

    https://x.com/telesurenglish/status/1956370300603625676



    https://www.telesurenglish.net/cuba-...oamp=available


    Cuba Rejects U.S. Visa Restrictions Over Medical Cooperation Programs

    Currently, over 24,000 Cuban health workers provide services abroad as part of solidarity missions.


    On Wednesday, Cuban Foreign Affairs Minister Bruno Rodriguez rejected statements by U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio, who announced that his country would limit the granting of visas to nations that request Cuban doctors and health workers.

    RELATED:

    Cuban Doctors Prevent Collapse of Grenada’s Health System: PM Mitchell

    “The U.S. Secretary of State is threatening visa restrictions against governments that have legitimate medical cooperation programs with Cuba. This shows imposition and aggression, using force as the new doctrine of that government’s foreign policy. Cuba will continue providing services,” Rodriguez said.

    Previously, in a message posted on social media on Wednesday, Rubio announced new measures the administration of President Donald Trump will implement to curb Cuban medical cooperation, which Washington accuses of exporting health workers under exploitative wage conditions.

    “The United States is expanding its Cuba-related visa restriction policy. The State Department has taken steps to restrict visa issuance to Cuban and complicit third-country government officials and individuals responsible for Cuba’s exploitative labor export program,” Rubio said.


    https://x.com/PamphletsY/status/1952380756116099451



    “The State Department is taking steps to impose visa restrictions on several African, Cuban and Grenadian government officials complicit in the Cuban regime’s coerced forced labor export scheme. We are committed to ending this practice. Countries that are complicit in this exploitative practice should think twice,” Rubio warned.

    The U.S. secretary of state also announced actions against several senior Brazilian government officials and former executives of the Pan American Health Organization (PAHO) for their participation in the “More Doctors” program, which allowed Brazil to provide health care in its most remote communities using Cuban personnel.

    During his two terms, President Trump has led a campaign to accuse Cuba of using doctors and other health workers as instruments of political influence. In June, the U.S. government announced the application of visa restrictions against several Central American government officials due to their involvement in programs to hire Cuban doctors.

    Currently, more than 24,000 Cuban health workers provide services abroad as part of solidarity missions, some of which are completely free while others are compensated for the services provided.

    https://x.com/telesurenglish/status/1919840842329817274

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    Default Re: Turmoil in Cuba

    Max Blumenthal,

    The US, Ukraine, Israel and Javier Milei vs the world on strangling Cuba

    https://x.com/MaxBlumenthal/status/1983570932552622305

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    Default Re: Turmoil in Cuba

    Zlatti71

    The US representative to the UN walked out of the hall during the speech of the UN permanent representative to Cuba during the discussion of the economic blockade of the island

    The international community calls on the US to end the blockade of Cuba.
    - SMI

    https://x.com/Zlatti_71/status/1983568628579483971

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    Default Re: Turmoil in Cuba

    teleSUR English

    The representation of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) to the United Nations (UN) demanded that the United States lift the economic, financial, and commercial blockade against Cuba.

    https://x.com/telesurenglish/status/1983556934667014481



    https://www.telesurenglish.net/asean...oamp=available

    ASEAN demands an end to the U.S. blockade against Cuba
    The blockade significantly affects any possibility of progress achieved by Cuba in the last 60 years

    The representation of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) to the United Nations (UN) today demanded that the United States lift the economic, financial and commercial blockade against Cuba.

    RELATED>

    UNGA Debates on U.S. Blockade Against Cuba

    Singapore’s ambassador to the UN, Burhan Gafoor, addressed the General Assembly also in his capacity as a representative of ASEAN, to discuss draft resolution A/80/L.6 on the report: Necessity of ending the economic, financial and commercial blockade imposed on Cuba by the United States government.

    We demand that the United States lift the economic and commercial blockade against Cuba. We reiterate our conviction that differences between the two sides can find consensus through dialogue and not confrontation, Gafoor said.

    The diplomat stressed that at the center of this issue was the people of Cuba, whose daily lives have been deeply affected by the blockade for decades.

    The blockade has caused the Caribbean country millions in losses in the areas of import, export and commercial transactions; and it has affected the possibility of attracting foreign investment, buying raw materials and other essential goods, he said.

    The representative of Singapore added that, for the Cuban people, this translates into shortages of products of daily use and difficulty in accessing vital medical services.

    The blockade significantly affects any possibility of progress achieved by Cuba in the last 60 years. In addition, the United States keeps Cuba on the list of countries sponsoring terrorism with the sole objective of reinforcing and exacerbating the impact of the blockade, he warned.

    Gafoor said the sanctions affect Cuba’s ability to access international financial institutions and participate in international trade. Likewise, the restriction on fuel exports has aggravated the current energy situation on the island, hindering the possibility for Cuba to optimally face the current climate challenges in the Caribbean.

    It has been 33 years since this General Assembly adopted this resolution, and it is time for a reset. We urge both sides to engage in open and constructive dialogue, based on mutual respect and common interest, the diplomat stressed.

    ASEAN joins the other members of this assembly in reiterating our call for the United States to lift its unilateral economic, financial and commercial blockade against Cuba, and to remove the Caribbean country from the list of state sponsors of terrorism, he concluded.
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    Default Re: Turmoil in Cuba

    teleSUR English

    Cuban Foreign Minister Bruno Rodriguez 🇨🇺 asserts that the permanent representative of the #USA🇺🇸 not only lies, straying from the topic, but also expresses himself in a rude manner against his presidency, against the dignity of the #UNGA, and against member states.

    https://x.com/telesurenglish/status/1983274986715611358

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    Default Re: Turmoil in Cuba

    And Cuba now faces hurricane Melissa,

    Translated from Spanish
    🇨🇺🌧 "We have prepared for the worst-case scenario": Díaz-Canel describes how Cuba faces the ravages of Hurricane Melissa

    🗣 "Substantial damage, and Hurricane Melissa is still over Cuban territory. I ask our people not to let their guard down, to maintain discipline and continue to stay well protected. As soon as conditions allow, we will proceed to recovery. We are ready," wrote the President of Cuba, Miguel Díaz-Canel on X.

    https://x.com/SputnikMundo/status/1983541255662383518




    teleSUR English

    #Cuba | President Miguel Diaz-Canel led an expanded session of the National Defense Council to coordinate actions in the face of the imminent impact of Hurricane Melissa, which reached category 5 with sustained winds of more than 260 kilometers per hour.

    https://x.com/telesurenglish/status/1983292700041650272

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    Default Re: Turmoil in Cuba

    Sputnik Mundo

    Dec 19
    Translated from Spanish
    🇲🇽🇨🇺 Mexico sends two ships to Cuba to help them alleviate their energy crisis

    🛢 Two vessels from Mexico, carrying a total of about 80,000 barrels of fuel, will arrive on the island in the coming days to help ease the severe energy crisis facing the Caribbean nation, according to data from the University of Texas Energy Institute, cited by Milenio.

    ⚠️ The shipments are taking place at a critical moment, marked by blackouts of 20 or more hours daily in wide areas of Cuban territory, amid uncertainty about the continuity of crude oil supplies from Venezuela.

    🚢 The vessels Ocean Mariner and Eugenia Gas, both flying the Liberian flag, loaded fuel at facilities of Petróleos Mexicanos (Pemex). The Eugenia Gas is already sailing toward the Cuban port of Moa (east), while the second vessel is preparing to set sail.

    💡 Cuba has been experiencing a deep energy crisis since mid-2024, due to recurring breakdowns in its thermoelectric power plants and a lack of foreign currency to import fuel. In the last year, the national electrical system has recorded five total collapses.

    📊 The 80,000 barrels sent by Mexico cover just over the island's daily deficit, which requires about 110,000 barrels for its basic needs.

    https://x.com/SputnikMundo/status/2002174862086058148

    "Hope is the thing with feathers that perches in the soul and sings the tune without the words and never stops at all."
    - - - - Emily Elizabeth Dickinson. 🪶💜

  40. The Following 2 Users Say Thank You to Ravenlocke For This Post:

    Bill Ryan (21st December 2025), Ewan (21st December 2025)

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