A Mass in Havana Defies Official Censorship Against Celia Cruz

Artists, diplomats and faithful gathered at the parish to pay tribute to the Guarachera de Cuba on its centenary.

Smiling and dressed in sequins, the image of the Queen of Salsa presided over the altar of the church, located on Salud Street, between Manrique and Campanario. / 14ymedio

14ymedio bigger14ymedio, Darío Hernández, Havana, October 21, 2025 / At the parish of Our Lady of Charity of Cobre, in the heart of Centro Habana, the name of Celia Cruz was heard, despite the censorship the Cuban regime has unleashed against other tributes on the island for her centennial, which falls this Tuesday. La Guarachera de Cuba symbolically returned to the island that banished her from official memory, and she did so with music, faith, and a gesture of defiance against the silence imposed for decades.

A framed photo of the smiling, sequined Guarachera de Cuba presided over the altar of the church, located on Salud Street between Manrique and Campanario Streets, where 14ymedio approached. At her feet were white flowers and lit candles. In the pews, artists, worshippers, and diplomats shared the same space.

Parish priest Ariel Suárez, in a calm but firm tone, reminded everyone that “faith knows no censorship.” His words were met with a murmur of approval from the audience. “This Mass was a request from Cuban artists who wanted to pay tribute to a woman who brought Cuba’s name to the world,” he added, while the image of Our Lady of Charity—the same one to whom the performer was a devotee—dominated the back of the church.

Parish priest Ariel Suárez, in a calm but firm tone, reminded those present that “faith knows no censorship.” / 14ymedio

Among those present, Mike Hammer, the chargé d’affaires of the U.S. Embassy in Cuba, did not go unnoticed. “It is an honor to commemorate the life of Celia Cruz here, in her homeland,” he said after the Mass. “She wanted freedom for the Cuban people, and that desire lives on in her legacy.”

At his side, artists such as Alain Pérez and Haila María Mompié shared memories and gratitude. Pérez, who worked with the singer on international stages, didn’t hide his emotion: “Celia was pure light, an ambassador of our culture. Her love for Cuba never faded, not even when it was forbidden.”

The musician also lamented that, even today, tributes to the singer continue to run into institutional vetoes. “I would have loved to see all the Cuban artists gathered here, without fear, to sing to her. I feel sorry for continue reading

them, because they’re missing out on that blessing,” the artist said, seeing that many pews in the parish church remained empty, a fear that still persists among Cubans.

“I would have loved to see all the Cuban artists gathered here, without fear, to sing to him,” said musician Alain Pérez. / 14ymedio

Mompié, dressed in white, asserted that she carried “Celia’s legacy like a treasure.” The singer released a song in her honor, “Mi vida es cantar” [My life is to sing], a title that evokes the Queen of Salsa’s philosophy of life. “Celia was Caridad [charity]—her middle name—and this temple, dedicated to the Virgin, is the perfect place to remember her. Her spirit is here today,” she added.

The Mass took place in a peaceful atmosphere, although political tension hung over the prayers. Outside, several curious onlookers paused to watch from the sidewalk; inside, the timbre of the Queen of Salsa’s voice—banned from Cuban radio and television for half a century—seemed to fill the air.

Days earlier, the National Center for Popular Music had canceled a theatrical performance dedicated to the artist by the El Público company, scheduled at the Cuban Art Factory. The decision sparked a wave of outrage among musicians and citizens, who denounced the censorship as an act of cultural pettiness.

In response, the FAC performed a symbolic gesture: an empty armchair was lit up on the stage and an hour of silence followed by the music of Celia Cruz. “Celia lives,” read the letters of light. That same message was repeated again at the Mass, now transformed into a prayer: Celia lives in the hearts of her people.

“It is an honor to commemorate the life of Celia Cruz here, in her homeland,” said the U.S. ambassador upon leaving the mass. / 14ymedio

The young urban musician Yomil showed off his forearm tattoo of Celia’s face. “She’s the only artist I have on my skin. She represents the best of us: talent, joy, and resilience,” he told the media. “No censorship can stop that.”

Celia Cruz, who died in 2003 in New Jersey, was never able to return to Cuba. Her last wish—to be buried on the island—was also not fulfilled. However, her voice continued to reach us through informal channels, on cassettes, CDs brought back from exile, and family memoirs.

The Mass concluded with prolonged applause. There were no political speeches or slogans, but the meaning was evident. “Celia, Cuba embraces you,” was heard from the pews, while the first chords of “Life is a Carnival” quietly played. Some sang along, others wept.


A mass in Havana commemorates Celia Cruz on her centenary / 14ymedio

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Why Are There Sugar Mills in Operation if There Is No Cane To Process? Asks Cuba’s Official Press

  • The planting program in all the Las Tunas companies “is delayed”
  • In Sancti Spíritus, only 20 of the 106 planned “cage cars” are available for transport ahead of the next harvest, which begins next December.
“Cage cars” for transporting sugarcane by rail at the Melanio Hernández sugar mill in Sancti Spíritus. / Escambray

14ymedio bigger14ymedio, Madrid, October 21, 2025 — The provincial press is once again providing most of the clues to the disastrous state of Cuba’s sugar industry, once a jewel in the crown of the country’s economy. This Monday, Escambray reveals that of the 106 “cage cars” that take the cane by rail to the sugar mills, only 20 have been repaired of the ones planned for next December, when the harvest begins.

Of these, 14 are in the Melanio Hernández sugar mill in Tuinucú, and six are in the Uruguay, located in Jatibonico. The repairs in the workshop of this last mill, says the report, “have been slowed down by electricity problems associated with the lack of a transformer and the power blackouts that occur on work days.”

The Sancti Spíritus provincial newspaper reports that Ferroazuc, the State company in charge of transporting the raw material to the mills, “intends to get about 130 cars ready,” an effort which it recognizes is “challenging in the midst of limitations and the time remaining before the start of the harvest.” Escambray warns that “Ferroazuc’s efforts in Sancti Spíritus need to advance further.”

Periódico 26 is more direct about the outlook for sugar in Las Tunas, with an article entitled “Besides cane, planting needs greater willingness,” which directly questions why there are mills in operation if there is not enough cane to process and the industry is “totally obsolete.” “Why are there sugar mills and factories if their raison d’être — the cane itself — is in crisis?” This is the dilemma with continue reading

which the author, Juan Soto Cutiño, concludes the article.

“Given all the complexity of a harvest, it is not feasible to mobilize all that equipment”

The article explains why the provincial government put the Antonio Guiteras mill at the head of the campaign instead of the Majibacoa mill. The Guiteras is “in better technical condition and easier to repair, with a competent labor force and a history of producing that is recognized by the country.”

Eddy Felipe, a representative of Azcuba in the province, added that it was also because of the low availability of cane to harvest for the Majibacoa mill.” There are only 130,000 tons of cane considered “fit to be processed,” the article continues, a quantity that at a rate of 4,550 tons per day and with 70% of the potential capacity of the mill, “would last for only 24 days of operation.”

“Let’s face it,” says Periódico 26. “Assuming all the complexity of a harvest — from the preparations to the start-up of the large agro-industrial chain that it belongs to — it is not feasible to mobilize all this equipment with the high cost involved, just to work a few days and produce a little sugar.”

In addition, the Majibacoa is carrying out two campaigns in which it is not even producing sugar but cane syrup, the same as the Colombia mill, which has survived four campaigns on the basis of this unrefined mixture. Cane syrup is used to produce rum, says the newspaper, and with a classification that is very much in demand and well-priced. Considering current conditions, this is very healthy for the economy of this sugar company.”

The fourth sugar mill in Las Tunas, the Amancio Rodríguez, is, according to Periódico 26, “the most critical and worrying case. It has been completely inactive for several years, and as can be seen on the ground, this situation could last for who knows how long.”

Therefore, it proposes to establish as a priority the planting of sugarcane. But the progress of this activity is also a disaster. The program, which includes 97.8 hectares of the Colombia, 143.8 hectares of the Amancio Rodríguez, 562.6 hectares of the Majibacoa and 1,092.5 hectares of the Guiteras, “is experiencing delays, to a greater or lesser extent, in all these companies.”

Juan Soto Cutiño recalls with nostalgia “those times when the Sugar Union organized competitions on weekends, even in Boyeros, and there were frequent mobilizations in support of the planting. The political and administrative directors of the municipality demanded concrete figures from the agencies of the areas to be planted, and the Union of Young Communists took up the challenge as a shock task.” But he is not deceived: “I recognize that present circumstances are in no way similar to those in the past.” Then he concludes by referring to the US embargo: “It would be a mirage to imagine great results amid the circumstances aggravated by the blockade*.”

“It would be a mirage to imagine great results amid the circumstances aggravated by the blockade”

That there wasn’t enough cane was something the residents of Artemisa warned about last month. If “the routines” do not change there will be no sugar, they asserted. Then, the official press of the province found that “history repeats itself. A panoramic view in any municipality with the cane tradition of Artemisa shows hectares of weeds where yesterday there was cane, so that only 47% of the cane expected for this period has been planted, 814 hectares of a plan for more than 1,700,” detailed the report.

The 2024/2025 harvest turned out to be the worst in Cuba’s history, although the real figures are unknown because the regime does not provide them. Last August, the Spanish agency EFE made a count based on the provincial press and concluded that, at best, they are more than 10,000 tons below the terrible harvest of 160,000 tons produced the previous year.

Fifteen sugar mills participated in the campaign, and 10 reported their results to the official media: a total of 95,584 tons. The remaining five did not disclose their production figures, but it is known that they all targeted 52,068 tons of sugar. That is, if they had complied with the plan, the harvest would have amounted to 147,652 tons.

This is far from the 8.5 million tons that the Island produced in the mid-1980s, when there were Soviet subsidies and sugar was still considered an economic engine and its main export.

President Miguel Díaz-Canel’s late August meeting with Zhang Anming, deputy general manager of the giant Guangxi State-Controlled Capital Operations Group Limited — the leader in sugar production in China — with the goal of exploring “joint projects,” indicates that Cuba is also counting on China for the recovery of the sugar industry.

However, the officials have published nothing else about this.

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*Translator’s note: There is, in fact, no US ‘blockade’ on Cuba, but this continues to be the term the Cuban government prefers to apply to the ongoing US embargo. During the Cuban Missile Crisis the US ordered a Naval blockade (which it called a ‘quarantine’) on Cuba in 1962, between 22 October and 20 November of that year. The blockade was lifted when Russia agreed to remove its nuclear missiles from the Island. The embargo had been imposed earlier in February of the same year, and although modified from time to time, it is still in force.

Translated by Regina Anavy

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COLLABORATE WITH OUR WORK: The 14ymedio team is committed to practicing serious journalism that reflects Cuba’s reality in all its depth. Thank you for joining us on this long journey. We invite you to continue supporting us by becoming a member of 14ymedio now. Together we can continue transforming journalism in Cuba.

The New York Mets Hire Cuban Baseball Player Roberto Peña and Give Him a $350,000 Bonus

The pitcher, who emigrated to the Dominican Republic in 2023, is part of the U15 team that qualified for the World Cup in 2022

In late September, the New York Mets approached Roberto Peña and offered to consolidate his dream of becoming a major league player. / Facebook/Francys Romero

14ymedio bigger14ymedio, Havana, October 19, 2025 — The US Major League team, the New York Mets, signed Cuban pitcher Roberto Peña. As part of the deal, the club awarded him a $350,000 bonus, the “highest incentive for a pitcher in the organization during the current period of international signatures 2024-2025,” journalist Francys Romero revealed.

Peña is part of a generation on the run. The athlete participated with the U15 team that qualified for the World Championship in 2022. More than 90 per cent of that team emigrated in 2023.

The player from Granma had outstanding performances on first base and as an outfielder with the Cuban national team. At the time of leaving the Island “he was among the top five batters in his class.” According to the reporter, he had gained in stature, muscle mass and physique, and had the attributes of a “power hitter.”

Peña arrived in early May in the Dominican Republic and after settling in was hosted by the Ray Baseball Academy of Edwin Castillo. For more than two years, he was followed by several talent scouts. At the end of September, the New York club approached the Cuban and offered to cement his dream in the major leagues. In an effort to formalize their relationship, they offered him $300,000 as an initial bonus but saw that other teams were interested and added another $50,000. continue reading

The ball player arrived in early May in the Dominican Republic and after settling in was hosted by the Ray Baseball Academy of Edwin Castillo

“The official signature will be for this international period, before December 15,” said Francys Romero on his social networks. At this time, the player has recorded straights of 93 miles per hour, change-ups of 83 miles per hour, a curve ball of 81 miles per hour and a sinker (fast ball) of 91 miles per hour.

Roberto Peña joins the Cubans who have previously played with the New York Mets, including Ed Bauta, Rey Ordóñez, José Candelita Iglesias, Yoenis Céspedes and the brothers Orlando El Duque Hernández and Livan Hernández, Raúl Valdés, Eli Marrero, Jorge Toca, Guillermo Heredia, Alay Soler, Yoan López and Adeiny Hechavarría.

Last Friday, a two-year contract extension was confirmed for Brayan Peña with the Detroit Tigers. The Cuban will return as a Minor League manager. “In 2025 he served as coordinator of the organization’s catchers, working with prospects like Thayron Liranzo and Josue Briceño.”

Francys Ramirez noted that “it is still unknown at which level Brayan will lead, and he currently is a bench coach for the Toros del Este in the Dominican Winter League.”

Translated by Regina Anavy

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Tropical Storm Melissa Forms in the Caribbean and Puts Eastern Cuba on Edge

Preventive evacuations have already begun in the Dominican Republic

Some forecasts warn that it could reach hurricane status if it stays above the open sea long enough. / Insme

14ymedio bigger14ymedio, Havana, October 21, 2025 — The Cuban Meteorological Institute (INSMET) confirmed this Tuesday at 11 a.m. the official formation of tropical storm Melissa over the Caribbean. INSMET recognizes that there is “great uncertainty” about its trajectory. According to Tropical Cyclone Warning No. 1, the system was organized during the early morning from an activated tropical wave and already shows signs of strengthening.

“During the last few hours, the tropical wave action over the central-eastern Caribbean Sea has become better organized, concentrating areas of heavy rain and electrical storms, and becoming tropical storm Melissa, the thirteenth of the current hurricane season, says the alert.

At that time, the eye of Melissa was located at 14.3 degrees north latitude and 71.7 degrees west longitude, which is about 480 kilometres south of Port-au-Prince, Haiti.

The storm has sustained maximum winds of 85 km/h, with higher gusts and a central pressure of 1,003 hectopascals. It is moving westward at 22 km/h, although, according to Cuban meteorologists, its speed will begin to slow during the day as it gradually turns northwestward. continue reading

Official meteorologists say they are keeping “a close eye on the evolution and trajectory of this system”

The report adds that in the coming days, Melissa will move slowly over the central Caribbean Sea, south of the Greater Antilles, and that oceanic and atmospheric conditions will become more favorable for its intensification, making the phenomenon “a potential danger for the region.”

However, the fact that the system moves slowly and remains for several days in the central Caribbean increases the possibility of it affecting directly or indirectly the eastern half of Cuba, as previously warned by the Provincial Meteorological Center of Ciego de Avila.

Official meteorologists say they are “keeping a close eye on the evolution and trajectory of this system,” and have announced that the next official announcement will be issued at 6:00 in the evening this Tuesday.

The Dominican Republic has already begun evacuations: “First responders are activating their contingency plans to the maximum,” said Juan Manuel Méndez, director of the Center for Emergency Operations (COE).

This means that “preventive evacuations have been initiated” in vulnerable areas, added Méndez at a press conference with the meteorological and emergency authorities. According to what was said at that meeting by the director of Civil Defense operations, Delfín Rodríguez, the country has shelters for 600,000 people.

International sources, like the US National Hurricane Center (NHC), agree that Melissa could intensify in the coming days, with an erratic or almost stationary pattern south of Jamaica and Haiti, and a possible shift to the northwest as a mid-level trough strengthens over the western Caribbean.

Although there is not yet a forecast that places the center of Melissa over the national territory, the specialists stress that the associated rains, waves and coastal tides could be felt in coming days in the provinces of Guantánamo, Santiago de Cuba, Granma and Holguín.

Most models show that the system could be maintained in the central Caribbean for at least five days

In these regions, the structural vulnerability of rural dwellings and roads, together with problems accumulated from the lack of maintenance for dams, levees and drains, aggravates the risk.

International forecast models suggest that Melissa will move over very warm waters (between 30 and 31°C), with relatively weak wind shear, conditions that are conducive to further development. Most scenarios of the European model (ECMWF) and the American model (GFS) show that the system could be maintained in the central Caribbean for at least five days, with a gradual increase in intensity. Some forecasts warn that it could even reach hurricane status if it stays over the open sea long enough.

The NHC has warned that the indirect effects -tidal waves and heavy rains- will already be felt in the next 48 hours over Jamaica, Haiti and eastern Cuba, while surf and riptides could spread to the northern coast of Cuba during the weekend.

The lack of resources to repair roofs, reinforce housing and secure crops puts pressure on communities that face hurricanes every year with deteriorated infrastructure and few alternatives.

The experience of previous hurricanes in October -such as Sandy (2012) and Matthew (2016)- reminds us that tropical systems at this time are often treacherous. They advance slowly, discharge prolonged rains and cause more damage by flooding than by wind. Therefore, specialists recommend activating preventive measures now, even if the storm still remains far from the Island.

Translated by Regina Anavy

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COLLABORATE WITH OUR WORK: The 14ymedio team is committed to practicing serious journalism that reflects Cuba’s reality in all its depth. Thank you for joining us on this long journey. We invite you to continue supporting us by becoming a member of 14ymedio now. Together we can continue transforming journalism in Cuba.

Neither Meek nor Apolitical, Cubans of Generation Z Are at the Forefront of Discontent on the Island

The clash between these young people and power is inevitable and is getting closer every day.

Young Cubans Anna Sofía Benítez and Erlis Sierra. / Collage

14ymedio bigger14ymedio, Yoani Sánchez, 20 October 2025 — For several years now, they have positioned themselves at the center of popular protest and rebellion in Cuba. Born between the mid-1990s and 2010, they are known as Generation Z and are overthrowing authoritarian regimes, forcing openings, and filling the streets with their demands in countries as diverse as Nepal, Madagascar, Morocco, and Peru. On the island, they are currently leading the discontent, aware that the current political and economic model leaves them only two paths: emigration or perpetual crisis.

When pediatrician Erlis Sierra outlined the serious problems facing the residents of Baire, in Santiago de Cuba, last Friday, many were surprised by the combination of youth and consistency he displayed during that meeting with government officials. Digital natives, despite Cuba’s technological backwardness and the late adoption of the internet by its population, Cubans like this young doctor have grown up with a wealth of information and international political debate far removed from the monopoly that has prevailed in the country for decades.

Derided as indifferent, meek, and apolitical, Cuban zoomers have nonetheless taken the lead in the cacerolazos [pot-banging] that is shaking communities and the denunciations on social media. With a nimble thumb that glides across screens, a mind that works with TikTok, and technology intertwined with DNA, these youngsters are holding in check a power that, despite the proclaimed generational renewal, still has an outdated mentality, stuck in the mid-20th century.

They are also the ones who have suffered the most in terms of the quality of the Cuban education system and public health system.

They are also the ones who have suffered the most in terms of the quality of the Cuban education system and public health system. Since entering a classroom, Sierra has only known a shortage of teachers, a lack of supplies, high levels of indoctrination, and a rigid teaching system that contrasts with the increasingly high professional standards of today’s world. Without prospects and less well-educated than their parents, Cubans under 30 have not benefited from any of the so-called “achievements of the Revolution.”

As a result, many have had to manage their own knowledge acquisition, relying on their families’ tenacity and their families’ pockets to complete a university degree or learn another language. Anna Sofía Benítez, the young woman who recently described the island’s everyday situation with realism and grace on her Facebook page, is also one of those zoomers for continue reading

whom a printed book has become a luxury few students can afford, but the vastness of the internet has granted them, just a click away, millions of digital copies.

Benítez and Sierra belong to a generation that hasn’t fared well in terms of the housing crisis either. Most of them live under the same roof as their parents and grandparents, lack the resources to even consider renting something out of their own pockets, making one of the main reasons for emigrating is to have a roof over their heads where they don’t share a bathroom or bedroom with their siblings and nieces and nephews. They have lived a good part of their lives in a country where the buying and selling of houses was only authorized in 2011, but dreaming of buying a space sounds like something for the nouveau riche and micro-entrepreneurs.

They are also poorer than their parents were at that age, have eaten worse, struggled more with public transportation, seen the Cuban peso descend into the abyss, received worse dental care, and lived in dirtier, more run-down, and culturally dull cities. They know that when they reach retirement age, if the current regime continues, they will very likely live more miserably than their grandparents.

They are the ones who shout with the greatest force, “We are not afraid!” when the blackouts spread, the heat increases, and the lack of food brings residents to the streets.

Last may, when the telecommunications monopoly Etecsa announced the tarifazo, a massive rate hike, it was Generation Z that became embroiled in a bitter dispute with the state-owned company. From university classrooms, in WhatsApp groups, and with their Instagram posts, they made an entity — that believed it had a free pass to squeeze Cubans and, in return, provide them with terrible and overpriced service — sweat. To silence them, the offices of the Ministry of Communications had to rush to create navigation packages designed for university students, which have brought more dissatisfaction than results.

It is repeated everywhere that these zoomers aren’t interested in freedom, that individual independence isn’t among their priorities, and that they pay more attention to the virtual world than to what’s happening around them. But Cubans are shattering that broadly worded portrayal. They’re the ones shouting the loudest “We’re not afraid!” when blackouts spread, the heat intensifies, and the lack of food drives residents into the streets of Havana and Contramaestre.

They’ve said goodbye to so many friends who crossed the Darién jungle as children, left through the US Humanitarian Parole Program, or made the trek south, that these Cubans have ended up living an existence divided between inside and outside. Many live with their grandparents because their parents became cubañoles, crossing the southern U.S. border, and are now waiting to regularize their immigration status with an I-220A document. They’ve spent their adolescence seeing their mothers only through videoconferences and listening in on those conversations, from a distance, with the constantly repeated acronyms, like ICE or USCIS.

The chasm that separates their virtual, cosmopolitan, and diverse lives and the lack of freedoms they live under in Cuba has fueled their rebellion. The gap between their aspirations and what they can achieve in their own country is the main fuel for their insubordination. The clash between these Generation Z Cubans and those in power is inevitable and grows closer every day. We must all contribute to ensuring that this struggle is not won again by a stagnant and senile regime.

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COLLABORATE WITH OUR WORK: The 14ymedio team is committed to practicing serious journalism that reflects Cuba’s reality in all its depth. Thank you for joining us on this long journey. We invite you to continue supporting us by becoming a member of 14ymedio now. Together we can continue transforming journalism in Cuba.

An Umpire Offers Apologies to a Journalist He Called ‘Frigid’ and ‘Impertinent’

Luis Felipe Casañas told Brita García that he was “dismayed” and “sorry”

Umpire Luis Felipe Casañas told journalist Brita García that he was dismayed by what happened. / Brita García

14ymedio bigger14ymedio, Havana, October 19, 2025 — Among the indiscipline and penalties happening in Cuban baseball, umpire Luis Felipe Casañas offered an apology to journalist Brita García. The apology came after she reported on her social networks that he called her “frigid” and “impertinent,” and he said that she “didn’t know anything” about baseball.

According to García, the umpire insulted her “in front of the Game Commissioner and all those present in the lower boxes of the Guillermón Moncada Stadium,” in the fifth inning of the game between Santiago de Cuba and Las Tunas.

García said that Casañas requested a meeting in which the rest of the umpires, the supervisor and the Game Commissioner were present. “Casañas was dismayed and sorry for his behavior,” she said. “The rest of his teammates showed respect for her work. All say that they work with respect and in order to to strengthen Cuban baseball, the Heritage of the Nation.”

The journalist said that she denounced the situation “in order to stop this type of behavior, which I have faced throughout my professional life.”

The journalist said that she denounced the situation “in order to stop this type of behavior, which I have faced throughout my professional life.” Machismo remains enthroned, and all the gender committees and other organizations for this purpose must be maintained and act with rigor,” she said.

Casañas’ annoyance was due to a Facebook post by the journalist. García considered excessive the seven-game suspension imposed by the continue reading

Commission on Santiago native Jeison Martínez for protesting two of the judges’ decisions.

News of the matter spread like wildfire. “Some of us showed solidarity with Brita, because we are her colleagues and know her, and others because these topics ‘sell’ well,” wrote the specialized media on Facebook, DPorto Sports LLC. “Between posts and comments, you could say that it was the ‘most clicked on’ in Cuban baseball this Friday,” it added.

The same post regretted the absolute silence after the apology. “This is more than a criticism, it is a call to attention about our reality and what we have become,” it said.

“We’re more interested in the problem than the solution. We look at and react more to an offense/mistake than when the one who is wrong recognizes what he did and repents. We are at a point, I think, where we prefer confrontation to understanding. Or the personal banalities and controversies rather than physical or virtual acts that highlight our ethical and moral principles. Which, unfortunately, fade more every day.”

The National Baseball Series has been plagued by scandals in recent weeks. The National Institute of Sports Physical Education and Recreation announced that the following were suspended for five games for indiscipline: manager Vicyohandri Odelín and players Yordanis Samón Matamoros and Eglis Eugellés Antunez, all from Camagüey, in addition to the provincial Commissioner, Roger Jesús Montada Feria.

Penalties were also given to the manager, Vicyohandri Odelín, and to players Yordanis Samón Matamoros and Eglis Eugellés Antunez, all from Camagüey

From the game between Mayabeque and Las Tunas last Sunday, Yoelkis Cruz and Deismel Hurtado were suspended for five games.

Rigoberto Hernandez, a coach for the Mayabeque team, was suspended for five games”for addressing an umpire with bad words” after a decision on first base. The manager of Granma, Jorge Miranda, received 10 suspended games for “protesting in a very rotten way over an arbitrated decision.”

Eriel Sánchez, manager of the Los Gallos de Sancti Spíritus team and former manager of the Cuba team, was penalized for hitting with a “wooden object” (in the first version it was a bat, but Sánchez denied it) Miguel Rojas Rodríguez, a National Baseball Commission official and Cuban sports celebrity in late September.

The National Baseball Commission suspended Eriel Sánchez and Miguel Rojas for five and three years, respectively.

Translated by Regina Anavy

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COLLABORATE WITH OUR WORK: The 14ymedio team is committed to practicing serious journalism that reflects Cuba’s reality in all its depth. Thank you for joining us on this long journey. We invite you to continue supporting us by becoming a member of 14ymedio now. Together we can continue transforming journalism in Cuba.

Repairing the La Coloma Disaster in Cuba Will Cost at Least 110 Million Pesos, Mostly in Foreign Currency

The lobster processing plant in Pinar del Río is still on a prioritized circuit and receives electricity all day despite its closure

The plant was reduced to ashes, and so far no one has explained the origin of the fire. / ACN]

14ymedio bigger14ymedio, Madrid, October 20, 2025 — There is unrest in La Coloma, Pinar del Río, after the fire that broke out on Saturday, October 11, in the facilities of the Industrial Fishing Company of the municipality, responsible for 45% of the lobster caught in Cuba and 80% of the tuna, both high-value products in the national and international markets. Despite the fact that at this time most of its employees cannot work, the entity has not lost its status of prioritized electricity and receives power constantly, complain residents in the area.

“I want to ask the director of the Electric Company, since he’s not facing up to it, why they are giving power to La Coloma if there is no lobster,” asks an anonymous person on the Facebook page of Ventas Pinar. The author accuses the director of the entity, Yordan Nogueira Tapia, of corruption, although he provides no other evidence than the strangeness of wasting electricity on a circuit that does not need it.

“Even being corrupt you must know and be smart. Now that’s enough, making us beg for a few hours of power that belongs to us by right. Electric power is not a luxury, it’s a necessity, so give us circuit P961,” he demands, adding that this same Saturday the entire city spent 16 hours in a blackout. “I’m not interested in your business, but do it on our behalf, okay? Face it, you ball of corruption, and do an analysis.”

“Electric power is not a luxury, it’s a necessity, so give us circuit P961”

According to the official press, “dozens” of employees are working on the company’s administrative tasks in an attempt to reorganize the reconstruction. Preliminary estimates indicate that some 110 million pesos — approximately $231,578 at the black market exchange rate — will be needed to clean up the mess, “much of it in foreign currency.” Nogueira Tapia, however, does not rule out a future increase in the amount as continue reading

demolition and waste collection progress.

At the moment, all production lines are affected, from preselection, peeling, cooking and packaging to precooking. The latter, which had already progressed, had the “latest generation machines” acquired in 2022: an automatic sorter and three bagging machines with their respective heat tunnels. The list of damages is never-ending, since not just the machines were affected. Also damaged were tables, stainless steel shelves, air conditioning equipment, walls and false ceilings, zinc covers and even some of the tanks. None of this was saved, and now efforts are being made to get the 44 working lobster boats to fish non-stop.

“That is the only way to overcome this situation, because most of the resources we need are imported, and today a considerable percentage of the currency generated by our business group and our Ministry comes from the lobster,” the director told the State newspaper Granma this weekend, saying that it shifted the responsibility to the fishermen. “They will have to spend more days away from home, because the transfer of what they catch will be to other territories. But we have explained to them that the recovery depends largely on what they are able to do,” he said.

There are 175 workers whose jobs are hanging by a thread: some of them will go to another plant — not specified — which is responsible for the processing of fish, conch and sea cucumber, as well as the preparation of some products not much appreciated by Cubans, like fish croquettes, fish medallions and chopped fish. Some employees will be engaged in the recovery of the burned plant and the rest will be “interrupted,” receiving 60% of their basic salary, which in practice leaves them in a very bad situation despite the fact that this plant was paying salaries far above the company average, 20,000 pesos versus Epicol’s 9,000.

According to a report published by the provincial newspaper Guerrillero, there is only one reason for optimism: “The freezing chambers did not suffer great deterioration, only the hinges and doors,” and three days after the fire they were already in operation, protecting part of the production.

“The freezing chambers did not suffer great deterioration, only the hinges and doors,” and three days after the fire they were already in operation.”

The destroyed plant was about to receive an online European inspection, thanks to the technology implemented, from wifi to ammonia detectors for water quality and temperature controllers monitored from the ice plant.

However, the fishing was no longer going well. Of the 2,700 tons that should have been fished up to the date of the disaster, at least 600 were missing, which the director attributed to such disparate causes as climate change and lack of fuel availability.

This weekend, workers got bogged down in the recovery of materials as some debris could be reused, even if it is in other places. The director, despite the drama, remains optimistic: “Now’s the time to have a better plant design. The one we had was very good, but the new one would be more in line with the latest requirements of the international market,” he said.

Lobster production, one of the most profitable sectors for the State, is already in sharp decline. In 2019, the fishermen of Isla de la Juventud obtained an average of 19 kilos (42 pounds) of lobster per boat, a quantity that fell to 5.8 kilos (13 pounds) in 2024.

As for the country, in the last five years, production has fallen by 84%, from 6,900 tons in 2019 to 1,100 last year. In addition, over five years the production of lobster tail also decreased by 45% (248,600 tons compared to 136,000) and by 9.2% for frozen whole lobster.

Translated by Regina Anavy

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COLLABORATE WITH OUR WORK: The 14ymedio team is committed to practicing serious journalism that reflects Cuba’s reality in all its depth. Thank you for joining us on this long journey. We invite you to continue supporting us by becoming a member of 14ymedio now. Together we can continue transforming journalism in Cuba.

A Conviction for Child Abuse in Order To Hide the Scandal of Street Children

A court in Havana sentences a couple to eight and ten years in prison for corruption of minors and sexual abuse

The well-timed coincidence with the scandal about children sleeping under the stairs of the dollar supermarket at 3rd and 70th does not go unnoticed. / 14ymedio

14ymedio bigger14ymedio, Havana, October 19, 2025 — The recent publication of a judicial report in official Cuban media, with full names of the defendants in a case of corruption and child abuse, breaks with the usual pattern of opacity by the authorities. While the country still comments on the scandal of children sleeping under the stairs of the supermarket on 3rd and 70th, the news reported by Canal Habana and reproduced by Cubadebate seems to respond to the need of the State to control the story about abandoned children with a carefully chosen show trial.

The official report says that on September 29, 2025, the People’s Municipal Court of Arroyo Naranjo held a hearing and public trial charging Daima Rodríguez Núñez and Carlos Díaz González with crimes of corruption of minors, acts contrary to the integral development of minors and sexual abuse.

In this case, four girls, aged 10, 7, 4 and 1, had been abandoned by their mother and abused by her partner. The court sentenced Rodríguez Núñez to eight years in prison and Díaz González to ten, as well as suspending the mother’s parental rights.

What is unusual about this news is not only the judicial process, but how it was communicated. The State media do not usually publish the names of defendants in such cases, even less when they involve minors. Nor do they usually give such specific details about the victims or the family dynamics. continue reading

This time, however, the report bears the institutional signature of the People’s Provincial Court of Havana and mentions without reservation the full names of those involved.

The response of the official apparatus has been to publish this court case as proof that “the system does act”

The well-timed coincidence with a scandal about children sleeping under the stairs of a dollar supermarket at 3rd and 70th does not go unnoticed. That story, published by this newspaper just a few days ago, highlighted the existence of minors abandoned in plain sight in the Cuban capital, sleeping between pieces of cardboard, asking for food and money, without visible intervention of child protection institutions. The image of these children, without official name or face, became evidence of an absent State in one of its most elementary duties: protecting children.

In the face of this media coup, the response of the official apparatus has been to publish this court case as proof that “the system does act.” The implicit message is that when a case of neglect and abuse is detected, the authorities respond firmly. But the reality on the streets of the Island contradicts the institutional narrative.

The communication strategy also seeks to shift responsibility for the tragedy of Cuban childhood to “deviant” or “antisocial” individuals, rather than recognizing a structural problem. The official speech portrays Daima Rodríguez Núñez and Carlos Díaz González as monstrous exceptions in a society where children are supposedly protected.

The mass exodus has aggravated the situation of thousands of children throughout the country, following the emigration of their parents

The emphasis on “due process” and application of the law “most beneficial to the accused” seems less directed at national public opinion, which has little access to real appeal mechanisms or judicial transparency, than at international observers. In other words, it is not just a matter of punishing two people, but of projecting an image of institutional legality.

In addition, the publication coincides with a context of increasing visibility of the phenomenon of abandoned children and extreme poverty in Cuba, an issue that for decades was swept under the rug of propaganda. The mass exodus has aggravated the situation of thousands of children throughout the country, following the emigration of their parents.

The visibility of the sentence in the official press — eight and ten years in prison — contrasts with the silence on dozens of other cases that never go to trial or remain in administrative obscurity. It also differs from the lack of effective public policies to prevent children from ending up living on the street. State abandonment is not a criminal offense under the Cuban Penal Code, but its consequences are visible and daily.

Translated by Regina Anavy

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The Cuban Regime Calls the Doctors Who Criticize the Medical Missions “Ungrateful, Resentful and Treacherous.”

“Do not spit on the dish that nourished you,” reads the headline in the Ministry of Public Health text disseminated on social networks

Cuban doctors assigned to the Vícam Switch rural community hospital in Sonora. / Facebook/IMSS Bienestar Health Services

14ymedio bigger14ymedio, Madrid, October 20, 2025 — There is no right to criticize according to the Cuban Ministry of Public Health. In a statement published on Facebook, it makes clear its thoughts about Cuba’s free education system: more than a citizen’s right is a mechanism to silence the population, it follows from the text. It states that the health workers who were trained on the Island say the most bitter things about the system. “They insist on insulting the medical education that made them doctors. It is not criticism; it’s ingratitude. It is not testimony: it’s treason.”

The post, originally taken from the profile of the Public Health Union in Santiago de Cuba, is signed in the name of the Ministry and has been disseminated by various social media accounts, including that of Santiago’s television. The title is forceful: “Do not spit on the dish that nourished you,” reads the headline. The text calls the doctors who criticize their working conditions “resentful,” among other things.

The publication recognizes that there is a lack of resources, workers are tired and many things need improvement, “but this does not erase the fact that the Cuban doctor is trained with excellence, ethics and vocation.” The main reproach includes that of having emigrated, an act which it considers “legitimate,” with a but. “Using your freedom to spit on what has educated you is wretched,” the text says, a phrase particularly striking by implying that only in exile is this freedom achieved. continue reading

“Not all who stay are accomplices. Not all who leave are brave.”

“Not all who stay are accomplices. Not all who leave are brave,” adds the message, which also deplores the accusation that weighs on the Cuban State of enslaving doctors on international missions based on these testimonies, although it does not do so clearly, but with hints.

In addition, it insists that those who speak against “Cuban medicine” –which they say “does not need propaganda” — “denigrate” it. “Do not destroy that which gave you the tools to be who you are. Be proud. Change it. But do not trample on it,” adds the text. It ends with: “Cuban medicine is a beacon, and the light is not extinguished by the poison of those who forget where they came from.”

The publication of this message occurs without an apparent reason to justify the unexpected attack, although doctors who decide to leave medical missions have been despised for decades by the official discourse. Not for nothing, all of them are subject to criminal proceedings, which may result in up to eight years’ imprisonment and a ban on returning to the country.

Cuban doctors who have worked abroad have for years been denouncing the practices of the Cuban regime, which, in addition to keeping the money that can reach 90% of their salary, confiscates their passports in order to prevent them from fleeing, prevents them from engaging with residents in the the country where they are working, and compels them to engage in government-friendly propaganda. To all this is added increasingly complex economic conditions, as the officials have tried to deposit the dollars owed the doctors on a Classic card instead of delivering the currencies in cash, as they expected.*

Because of these practices, the US government has considered for years that Cuba enslaves its doctors, and in recent months, the Trump administration has pressured several countries to modify their agreements with Havana and hire the doctors directly, something that has already been achieved with the Bahamas, Grenada and Jamaica.

*Translator’s note:In 2022, the Human Rights Foundation issued a report calling the Cuban doctors on international medical missions “victims of human trafficking.”

Translated by Regina Anavy

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A Young Doctor Arrested in Baire Reappears in a Video Made by State Security

Erlis Sierra says he has not been ill-treated and is currently in a “dialogue with the relevant institutions”

His ways and words in the film contrast with those of the passionate and energetic young man in another recording where he strongly criticized the inaction of the institutions. / Screen Capture

14ymedio bigger14ymedio, Havana, October 19, 2025 — In the worst style of the Moscow trials and the self-criticism of the poet Heberto Padilla, this Saturday a video circulated in which the young doctor Erlis Sierra, arrested after the protests of Baire, in Santiago de Cuba, says that he does not want to be a “leader of anything” nor did he consider himself a “counter-revolutionary.” In the clumsy beginning, before the pediatrician speaks, the voice of a State Security officer announcing that recording has begun is heard.

“I would like to inform you that I have not been mistreated,” says Sierra, who awakened a wave of solidarity after a film was broadcast of the moment when he demanded, in front of several local officials, an improvement in the living conditions in Baire, in the municipality of Contramaestre. The blackouts, lack of drinking water and high food prices are some of the reasons that brought the demonstrators to the streets last Thursday night.

Following peaceful protests in Baire, several arrests have been reported, including the arrest of Sierra by two police officers at his own home. Subsequently, his mother, Ania Gómez Leiva, denounced the incident in a video on social networks and called on “the Cuban people” for help, because her son had been handcuffed in the Police Unit of Contramaestre and was being transferred to the city of Santiago de Cuba. Following the dissemination of this complaint, Gómez was also detained for several hours.

Shortly after the demonstrations “a truck with milk powder appeared”

The mother stresses that her son was not among the people who beat on pots and pans at the demonstration and that his statements to the local Communist Party secretary were not disrespectful at all. Gómez also says that after three months without receiving milk from the rationed market for the children continue reading

of the community, shortly after the demonstrations “a truck with powdered milk appeared.”

Sierra’s arrest sparked a wave of solidarity among Baire residents and social media users, who demanded his immediate release. Internet users also recalled that the commitment made by the provincial authorities, who assured that no one would be arrested after the demonstrations, was being violated.

For its part, the video of Sierra during his arrest, published in the Facebook group Revolico Baire, was shared anonymously along with a message that hoped to bring calm: “Good night, brothers. Erlis is well, he sends his greetings to everyone. Thank you very much for the support,” the short text said.

In the recording, Sierra appears to read a script and states that he has not been mistreated “physically or verbally” and is currently in a “dialogue with the relevant institutions.” He also calls for channeling social grievances through “a respectful dialogue in order to not divide our people.”

The protest occurred in the middle of a blackout that exceeded 24 hours

His manner and words in the film contrast significantly with those of the passionate and energetic young man who reeled off the problems in Baire before local officials, in another recording that circulated hours before and was made last Friday after the protest. On that occasion, the young pediatrician strongly criticized the inaction of institutions in the face of serious problems affecting daily life, such as the poor condition of the streets and the accumulation of garbage.

His words to officials are in tune with the demands that were heard hours earlier on the streets of Baire, where on Thursday around 7:40 pm, residents began banging on pots and pans and shouting slogans like “We’re not afraid!” and “Freedom!” The neighborhoods of La Salada, El Transformador and Abisinia were the epicenter of the spontaneous mobilization that quickly spread to other streets of the village.

Several neighbors documented the demonstration with their mobile phones. The videos show people walking in groups, banging on pots and pans, and yelling phrases against the government, such as “Down with Díaz-Canel!”

The protest took place amid a 24-hour blackout, with no drinking water and an arbovirus outbreak that is worsening the local health crisis. The demonstrators avoided the main road to evade police checkpoints and walked through inner streets, passing by 8th Avenue and Central Avenue (4th Avenue), until they reached the Baire Central Park. There they concentrated in front of the police unit and next to the residence of Salvador Heredia, president of the People’s Council, where they chanted slogans of freedom and justice.

Translated by Regina Anavy

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Iberostar, the First International Chain Authorized to Rent Hotels in Cuba

Foreign companies will have more freedom to manage facilities and set wages

The first hotel on the island to implement the new formula will be the Iberostar Origin Laguna Azul in Varadero, starting January 1st. / Facebook/Magdiel Perez Martinez

14ymedio bigger14ymedio/EFE, Havana, October 17, 2025 / In its desperation to stem the sharp decline in tourism and foreign currency inflows, the Cuban government has taken a step it had long resisted: allowing international chains to rent out state-owned hotels and set employee salaries. According to EFE, sources familiar with the negotiations confirmed the first agreement was signed with the Spanish company Iberostar .

This represents a paradigm shift in a sector that until now had been tightly controlled by the Cuban State through the Ministry of Tourism and various companies in the Gaesa (Business Administration Group SA) business consortium, which is controlled by the Revolutionary Armed Forces.

The new management model, among other things, and according to the same sources, will allow hotel chains to set the salaries they pay their employees for the first time—although it is not specified whether they will be able to pay part of the wages in dollars or euros—instead of having to pay the very low salaries set by the State in pesos.

The new system aims to begin with pilot experiences in establishments of various large international hotel chains.

The first hotel on the island to implement this new formula is the Iberostar Origin Laguna Azul, located in Varadero. The agreement has already been signed and will begin operating on January 1, 2026.

Prime Minister Manuel Marrero, in advance, this year’s FITCuba trade fair, announced that among the measures the executive branch was considering to boost the sector, which is facing an unstoppable debacle, was the leasing of state-owned tourist facilities. These agreements, according to EFE, represent a qualitative leap forward compared to the first concrete announcement in this respect: the two letters of intent signed with Chinese counterparts “for the negotiation of a lease for the Copacabana Hotel” in Havana, as reported in late April by the official newspaper Granma.

The movement, sources consulted indicated, has a dual objective. On the one hand, it seeks to increase the country’s income, which is mired in a serious crisis and urgently needs foreign currency to import basic necessities such as food and fuel. continue reading

On the other, it seeks to provide the large hotel chains operating on the island with greater autonomy and flexibility to improve service—one of the main handicaps in the sector today—and, consequently, also improve the image of these establishments, which has suffered in recent years due to the country’s crisis.

According to EFE, the new system aims to begin with pilot projects in establishments belonging to several major international hotel chains. Cuban authorities are negotiating the terms of these agreements separately with each chain, and there are apparently no common scales for setting the rent or fixed fees. Neither party has agreed to disclose the agreed rental amounts.

With this decision, the Cuban government seeks to increase its foreign currency income in two ways. Directly, through the revenue it earns from renting out properties to hotel chains. Indirectly, this measure also seeks to boost a key economic sector for the country.

With this decision, the Cuban government seeks to increase its foreign currency income in two ways.

Tourism is also Cuba’s third largest source of foreign currency (behind professional services and remittances), which it needs because it imports 80% of what it consumes. This is intended to revitalize visitor numbers, which are currently at their lowest levels this century (excluding 2020 and 2021, due to COVID-19 restrictions).

So far this year, international tourist numbers have fallen compared to 2024, when they were already the lowest in 17 years. Industry sources expect the year to end at around 1.8 million visitors, compared to 2.2 million in 2024 and the 4.7 million—the island’s all-time high—reached in 2018.

The hotels also perceive the measure as beneficial, according to people involved in the negotiations with the Cuban government. First, because it allows them to have “totally autonomous” management for the first time. Until now, although they managed hotels owned by Gaesa, they had to follow multiple official guidelines and obtain state approval for many issues, from investments to menus, including salaries.

The plan, after these pilot tests, includes expanding the process of change in management to the country’s hotels, although no timeline has been set.

In a context of global tourism growth, Cuba’s figures are alarming and have been disastrous for Spanish hotel chains, such as Iberostar and Meliá. As the specialized media outlet Hosteltur recently pointed out, consistent with another article published by the economic daily Cinco Días, these companies have persisted in their commitment to Cuba despite it being the country that is going against all the positive global forecasts for the sector, especially its direct competitors, Mexico and the Dominican Republic.

In a context of global tourism growth, Cuba’s figures are alarming and have been disastrous for Spanish hotel chains.

At the end of August, the same outlet published graphs highlighting the situation of Spanish companies compared to the official figures reported by Cuba’s National Office of Statistics and Information (ONEI). Hosteltur notes that “in 2018 and 2019, the island received 4.6 and 4.2 million international tourists, respectively, driven by a more favorable context in relations with the US and greater openness to travel.” Although pre-pandemic rates have already been surpassed in other countries, this is not the case in Cuba by a long shot.

After hitting historic lows due to COVID-19, Cuba’s numbers slowly climbed to 2,436,980 tourists in 2023. Since then, it has been on a downward spiral. Last year, the number of foreign visitors fell to 2,203,117, and in the first half of 2025, only 981,856 were received, which proportionally amounts to fewer than two million a year.

The consequences for the interests of the Spanish chains have been catastrophic. They have 71 hotels on the island, primarily Meliá (34) and Iberostar (18). Further behind are Roc (with five establishments), Valentin Hotels (with four), Sirenis (with three), Barceló, Blau, and Minor (each with two), and Axel Hotels with one. In total, they have 27,679 rooms.

The island, in fact, is the third country in terms of the number of rooms offered by Spanish hotel chains, behind only Mexico (around 50,000 rooms in 125 hotels) and the Dominican Republic (36,000 rooms in 75 establishments). The significant difference is that in these two countries, the sector continues to set records for occupancy and profits.

Between January and July of this year, the Dominican Republic received almost 7,200,000 tourists, 3.2% more than the same period last year, and Mexico registered, from January to June, no less than 47.4 million international visitors, 13.8% more than in the same months of 2024.

Taking into account that only 981,856 were received in the first half of 2025, proportionally it would not even amount to two million annually.

Meanwhile, in Cuba, only 1,259,972 international visitors arrived as of August, representing a 21.64% drop compared to 2024.

Although this represents an improvement compared to July—when the drop reached 23.2% compared to 2024—the figures already make the government’s goal of reaching 2.6 million tourists this year unfeasible. Considering that only 981,856 tourists were received in the first half of 2025, proportionally, this would not even reach two million annually, which would surpass the record negative figure of 2024, when 2.2 million travelers were received.

It was the worst record in 17 years, excluding 2020 (with 1,085,920 foreign visitors), 2021 (with 356,470), and 2022 (with 1,614,087), the years affected by the COVID-19 pandemic.

Onei recorded that 135,985 international travelers arrived on the island in August, a lower number than in July, when 142,131 arrived.

On the other hand, according to the Onei semiannual report, between January and June of this year, revenues fell below one million ($981,856), a 25% decrease compared to the same period in 2024 ($1,309,655). Consequently, revenues plummeted by 20.6% (from almost 71 billion pesos to just over 56 billion).

Onei does not provide net income after deducting operating costs—very high in the tourism sector—but in Cuba’s case, it is estimated that these represent 70% of gross income, which would give a net income of $703 million, in the best-case scenario.

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Cuba Passes the Hat and Vietnam Deposits $21 Million

The campaign launched by the local Red Cross aims to “support the Cuban people,” although it is not known where the money will end up.

In the past, some international aid has been diluted by bureaucracy, giving priority to state-owned companies or institutions aligned with the government. / X / Rogelio Polanco

14ymedio bigger14ymedio, Havana, October 18, 2025 / More than 16,000 kilometers away from the island of blackouts, the Vietnamese have responded to the regime’s call for solidarity with the enthusiasm of a charity marathon. The campaign launched by the Vietnam Red Cross closed with more than $21 million raised to “support the Cuban people,” according to preliminary figures released Friday in Hanoi.

The collection, which began on August 13 to commemorate the late Fidel Castro’s 99th birthday, took place in the context of the so-called “Vietnam-Cuba Friendship Year” and the 65th anniversary of diplomatic relations between the two nations. The chosen date symbolically appeals to both sentiments and wallets.

According to the organizers, by 8:00 p.m. last Thursday, they had received more than two million individual and collective contributions, totaling approximately 555.8 billion Vietnamese dong (equivalent to more than $21.1 million US). The initial goal of 65 billion dong (approximately $2.4 million) was surpassed in just 30 hours. Cuba, accustomed to “passing the hat” in search of international solidarity, did not have to wait long this time to see the miracle. continue reading

In a Facebook post, the Vietnamese Red Cross spoke of a “special voyage” of compassion and gratitude between the two peoples. “The good emotions left behind will surely resonate long in the hearts of all Vietnamese people,” the organization wrote. However, when planning their trips, not many Vietnamese choose Cuba as a tourist destination.

No clear details have been offered on how or when these funds will be distributed.

On the same social network, Vietnamese citizens expressed their enthusiasm for participating in the collection. “The affection of the Vietnamese people toward the Cuban people is incredible and impressive,” wrote Pham Tran Hoa. The campaign will officially close this Saturday, when, in addition to acknowledging donations, the prizes for the musical composition contestL Vietnam-Cuba: Song of Friendship That Resounds Forever will be awarded.

During the competition’s announcement, Do Hong Quan, president of the Union of Literary and Arts Associations of Vietnam, said: “We have a priceless treasure: the talent, artistic creativity, heart, and emotion of the artist.” A treasure that, in his view, will serve to compose immortal songs and strengthen a bridge of friendship built for decades on slogans, symbolic exchanges, and speeches about “socialist brotherhood.”

The closing ceremony will be attended by Havana’s ambassador to Hanoi, Rogelio Polanco, who will not sing, but will make arrangements so that the Cuban people can enjoy the performance of revolutionary singer Nguyen Huong Giang, who is also a lieutenant colonel in his country’s Army.

Although officially the money raised is intended to “support the Cuban people,” no clear details have been offered about how or when these funds will be distributed. In the past, some of the international aid has ended up being diluted in bureaucracy, prioritizing state-owned companies or institutions aligned with the government, over the population. Experience has taught that the path between a donation and an empty refrigerator is often long and fraught with ideological obstacles.

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In Cuba There is Nothing to Celebrate on the International Day of Older Persons

Sick and wheelchair-bound, an elderly man begs for money in front of a dilapidated building filled with trash. / 14ymedio

14ymedio, October 1, 2025

1/7 From his wheelchair, an elderly man makes a living selling pastries in the street. / 14ymedio
2/7 An elderly man laboriously carries a bag of groceries on a Havana street. / 14ymedio
3/7 Precariousness hits the elderly hardest: elderly in the daily struggle to survive. / 14ymedio
4/7 Many of the elderly who do not have remittances are destined to suffer hardship. / 14ymedio
On Monte Street, sitting in her wheelchair, an elderly woman displays a sign that reads: Help feed me. / 14ymedio
6/7 Outside the Habana Libre Hotel, an elderly man waits patiently for someone to offer him a few coins. / 14ymedio
7/7 An elderly woman, a resident of Diez de Octubre, carries a bucket of water after spending days without service in her home. / 14ymedio

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The Dentists at a Clinic in Matanzas, Cuba, Have Disappeared

A patient in pain discovers that no one is caring for her any more

The woman waiting to be seen presses the ice cubes against her left cheek and looks up at the ceiling. / 14ymedio

14ymedio bigger14ymedio, Julio César Contreras, Matanzas, October 18, 2025 —  At the “César Escalante” Dental Clinic in the city of Matanzas, not even the characteristic smell of the dentist remains. The echo of the hallways replaces the hum of the switched-off equipment, and the silence is broken only when a frustrated patient leaves, despairing. Despite its status as a teaching center, not a single student can be seen wandering through its halls, where generations of dentists were once trained.

On the corner of Zaragoza and Contreras, the establishment—which should serve more than 19,000 people—looks empty. “I found the reception empty and the hallways deserted; it gives the impression of abandonment,” a Matanzas resident told 14ymedio. This Wednesday, she arrived with a damaged tooth and a cloth with some ice cubes, almost melted, to help her cope with the sharp pain caused by an inflamed nerve.

With her eyes turned upward every time the intense discomfort escalated, the patient ran into a young woman after a while who informed her that they were only seeing urgent cases. “In the end, I couldn’t tell if I was talking to an employee or a patient because I had nothing to identify her,” she says, unsure whether her situation would fall under the “urgent” category. continue reading

“We’re practically working the same way we did a century ago.” / 14ymedio

To ensure treatment, she has arrived with some supplies that are in short supply at the facility. “I brought sterile gloves, gauze, lidocaine, and a syringe with one of those little needles you use for your mouth,” she explains to this newspaper. A roll of ham and cheese, wrapped in paper, and a cola complete the supplies she keeps in her bag. “In case the person treating me hasn’t been able to eat lunch,” she adds.

For the staff, the critical situation at the clinic, including prolonged power outages and a lack of dental supplies, is a serious problem. “The dissatisfaction is not only felt by the public, but also by those of us who love our profession. We’re practically working the way we did a century ago,” acknowledges a dentist who mostly goes to work “to waste time because there’s either no electricity or no water.”

Virtually all the doors are closed and unmanned. / 14ymedio

In the long hallway leading to the consulting rooms, virtually all the doors are closed and unstaffed. A few years ago, the dreaded sound of dental drills, the clatter of metal instruments, and the dentist’s voices urging a patient in pain to calm down would come from inside those cubicles. All of that is missed amid the silence that now pervades the entire room.

The woman waiting to be seen presses the ice cubes against her left cheek and stares at the ceiling. Her lips move in a very low prayer. A murmur in which she asks for someone in a white coat, a smile on their face, and the ability to take away the pain that keeps her from sleeping or living.

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The “Grito de Baire” Resonates Again in Eastern Cuba

Dozens of residents of the Santiago neighborhood took to the streets banging their pots and pans and shouting “Freedom!”

The neighborhoods of La Salada, El Transformador, and Abisinia were the epicenter of the spontaneous mobilization. / Social media

14ymedio bigger14ymedio, Havana, October 17, 2025 – In Baire, a small town in the municipality of Contramaestre, Santiago de Cuba, dozens of residents took to the streets this Thursday to protest the prolonged blackouts, food shortages, and lack of drinking water that have affected the population for weeks. Although the crisis is affecting the entire island, its effects are often worse in the eastern part of the country.

Around 7:40 p.m., residents began banging on pots  and pans and shouting slogans such as “We are not afraid!” and “Freedom!” according to reports from journalist Yosmany Mayeta Labrada. The neighborhoods of La Salada, El Transformador, and Abisinia were the epicenter of the spontaneous mobilization, which quickly spread to other streets in the town.

Several residents documented the demonstration with their cell phones. The videos shared show people walking in groups, banging pots and pans, and shouting out anti-government messages like “Down with Díaz-Canel!”

The protest took place amid a power outage that had lasted more than 24 hours, with no drinking water, and an arbovirus outbreak worsening the local health crisis. “More than 30 hours without electricity or drinking water, several infected with the arbovirus,” said activist Yamilka Lafita, known online as Lara Crofs, who highlighted the exhaustion and frustration that motivated the march. continue reading

Authorities responded by cutting off internet access throughout the municipality.

During the first few minutes, the authorities responded with a familiar tactic, cutting off internet access throughout the municipality. This has become a common method to prevent images and videos of the protests from spreading and spurring repercussions in other areas. Connections were restored approximately 30 minutes later, allowing several residents to share evidence of their discontent. Following this, pro-regime social media profiles often displayed images of the protest sites, but now in a seemingly calm state, giving the impression that “nothing has happened” or that everything is “under control.”

The protesters avoided the main road to avoid police checkpoints and marched through inner streets, passing through Avenida 8 and Avenida Central (Avenida 4), until they reached Baire Central Park. There, they gathered in front of the police station and next to the residence of Salvador, president of the People’s Council, where they chanted slogans of freedom and justice.

Contramaestre woke up this Friday to police patrols and Interior Ministry vehicles surrounding the main streets and parks. The number of detainees is unknown, but local activists fear a new wave of arrests in the coming days, as has occurred during previous protests.

The town of Baire occupies an emblematic place in national history for being the scene of the Grito de Baire

Since the historic Island-wide demonstrations of 11 July 2021, popular unrest has been evident in various provinces across the country, fueled by prolonged blackouts, food shortages, and deteriorating basic services. However, the regime’s response continues to be repression and the criminalization of those demanding improvements.

The town of Baire holds an emblematic place in national history as the scene of the Grito de Baire (Cry of Baire) on February 24, 1895. That day marked the official beginning of the 1895 Cuban War of Independence against Spanish colonial rule, organized by José Martí. Although the insurrection occurred simultaneously in different parts of the country, it was in Baire where the uprising took on the greatest symbolic and political resonance, becoming one of the first places where patriots took up arms to conquer freedom.

That act of defiance against the Spanish metropolis became a milestone in the independence struggle and a symbol of popular resistance. Since then, Baire’s name has been associated with rebellion and the libertarian impulse, a historical memory that resonates again today in the streets of that same town, where more than a century later, Cubans once again raise their voices against oppression.

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