Etecsa’s ‘Tarifazo’ Forces Cubans To Return to Dangerous Parks with WiFi

In Matanzas, users recount the difficulties of connecting to the network and thefts of accounts by hackers.

The connection’s strength isn’t a reason to jump for joy. / 14ymedio

14ymedio bigger14ymedio, Pablo Padilla Cruz, Matanzas, 12 July 2025 — The ‘tarifazo’ [huge price increase] imposed by Cuba’s State telecommunications monopoly Etecsa has suddenly returned hundreds of Cubans to the past and the search for a Wi-Fi hotspot that would allow them an internet connection. But also, due to time, those places are no longer what they once were. Blackouts and the widespread increase in theft and violence make those who are forced to resort to this option vulnerable, due to a lack of effective connections at home and the expensive and poorly managed data.

“I study,” says Yusmari sitting on a bench in Paseo Martí, in the Versalles neighborhood of Matanzas. “It’s not that all I do on the internet is study, but most of the time the so-called 6 GB extra for students, at least in the university Camilo Cienfuegos, is slow,” she says. Homework doesn’t wait, explains the young woman, who points out how small the packages are. “The 500 MB per month that we are given in school expire in no time, because a PDF enquiry can use more than 50 MB easily, and you have to get a turn for time at the computer. The only thing left is the park wifi,” she says.

But Yusmari knows that the landscape is not the same as it was a decade ago. “Now there is an atmosphere of insecurity; in addition, the street lighting almost never works because of the blackouts, so you have to be careful about coming alone. Nothing has ever happened to me, but if someone can snatch your cell phone in broad daylight, what will they do at night?” continue reading

“Now there is an atmosphere of insecurity; in addition, the street lighting almost never works because of the blackouts.”

The connection’s strength isn’t a reason to jump for joy.  “There are parks that are better or worse,” says Orestes, who uses the wifi to download files while waiting for his transport to Varadero, where he works as a musician. “Everything depends on the users; in my case it’s the worst since there is not much signal in this area, and people point their phones at the park so they don’t have to leave the house. Many times in less than an hour the phone is disconnected more than 10 times, and you have to restart the authentication process,” he says. The average download speed on fixed broadband is 2.73 Mbps with an upload speed of just 0.96. These results place Cuba in 159th place out of 159 countries evaluated, according to SpeedTest.

Orestes complains that it is sometimes impossible to even enter the Etecsa user portal. “And to top it off there are cloned portals that steal your account and password with total impunity. In the end, with patience, it is resolved, and at least something lets you upload, but it’s a constant struggle.”

The young musician says that the insecurity is not only physical but also due to the hackers. “Several people have complained,” says a worker from a nearby point of contact. “Mostly elderly people, but I can’t do anything, only raise their complaints to the managers. My functions as a company worker are only commercial.” Etecsa’s investment in cybersecurity appears to be nil, they both claim.

The great alternative to public wifi areas were, before data worked, the hotels. In the case of Matanzas, many people approached the Velasco and the Louvre, in the center of the city, for their good options to get online. Being service networks abroad, the speed was much better – up to 4 MB of data transfer – and all you had to do was create an Etecsa account, but that only worked in those hotels.

The great alternative to public wifi areas were, before data worked, the hotels. In the case of Matanzas, many people approached the Velasco and the Louvre.

“The option no longer exists, at least for those Cubans who used it,” says Reinaldo, who works as a freelancer. “One day, without further ado, they told me that they could not top up my account because the service was only for guests, even though we are the Cuban customers who fill the lobby and the bar, both at the Velasco and the Louvre.”

“And every day, I spent more than three hours there and consumed enough, even had lunch several times a week. But now that network is under-exploited, and many people who are creating new ways of bringing foreign exchange into the country have to look for other paths. We all lost in this,” he says with resignation.

One of the employees at the Louvre confirms that if you are not a customer, you cannot have an account to connect to the internet in the hotel. “I don’t know the reason, and it’s not that I personally want it, but one day that law came from above and remained,” he says. “As a worker, I must comply, although it seems extreme. More so now, with the controversy over mobile data.” The employee claims that before, under the pretext of connecting to the internet, the bar was filled with domestic customers who are now mad. “Sometimes, he recalls, we couldn’t even keep up.”

Translated by Regina Anavy

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San Pedro Campground: From a Coastal Paradise to a Refuge for Victims in Artemisa

The official press criticizes the management of the village, where only 35 cabins operate, half of the workers are missing, and salaries do not reach 3,000 pesos.

If current conditions continue, it’s no wonder San Pedro is on its way to disappearing. / El Artemiseño

14ymedio, Havana, 13 July 2025 — Looted by bandits, illegally occupied, a refuge for victims: the popular campsite at San Pedro, a beach in Bahía Honda (Artemisa), has been through it all. Once a paradise, the place is practically inaccessible due to the marabou weeds and the poor condition of the roads. As if that weren’t enough, it was hit by a cyclone last year, and its devastation is still visible, as if Rafael—which hit Cuba as a Category 3 hurricane—had passed through yesterday.

In an report unusual for its critical tone, the newspaper El Artemiseño reports on the current neglect of the camping sector, run by the Alojamiento company. In 2014, when the government decided that the companies’ summer cottages would be used by the population or become homes for victims of the disaster, Alojamiento received nearly 30 cabins that belonged to the sugar industry. They came with “air conditioning, televisions, refrigerators, beds, curtains, various transport options, a generator, and other resources.” A similar number of cabins were transferred a few years ago by the Ministry of the Interior, which exchanged them for another village in Mariel.

More than a decade after it settled in San Pedro, out of 70 facilities, Alojamiento now has only 35 that are habitable, and only seven were occupied during the newspaper’s visit. “The hurricane caused a lot of damage to the roofs, when the coconut trees fell. They will be repaired, but so far there is no cement,” the director of the camp explained to the newspaper. However, Rafael is not the only disaster to blame for the area’s dereliction, with weeds over a meter high and abandoned to “neglect”—according to the newspaper. continue reading

Fallen trees, the remains of a playground, a restaurant, a ranch, or a game room—all are “at the mercy of the rain and the sun.” / El Artemiseño[/caption]

The mere 20 kilometers to enter are almost endless, between deep hollows and abundant marabou grass. One doesn’t pass any vehicles along the way, except those pulled by horses. And very few of them,” the newspaper criticizes, noting that with each step through the campground, it finds more traces left by “time and apathy.”

The government hasn’t passed up the opportunity to blame local residents: “This ’neglect’ was the opportunity for residents of Bahia Honduran, recently affected by the 2024 hurricane, to occupy cabins on their own. From others, they stole windows, doors, toilets, fences, and paving. And according to what we’re told, some ‘daring’ individuals marked the remaining ones as their property.” However, the newspaper acknowledges that if the authorities had done their job, things would be different.

Fallen trees, the remains of a playground, a restaurant, a ranch, and a game room—all are “at the mercy of rain, sun, and deterioration.” The options of those staying in the available cabins don’t vary much from those called out in the newspaper. “It’s an affordable option when comparing hotel and rental prices near the beaches, but it requires better conditions,” explains one vacationer who rented two houses for which he had to bring “everything, even the refrigerator and drinking water.”

The man has been a regular at San Pedro for 20 years, traveling with his family, and no one could better identify the facility’s debacle. “The campground staff is very nice, but they don’t offer food or recreation. The playground is gone. We cook with electric equipment, but due to the constant power outages, we use alternatives,” he says, before showing the newspaper a wood-burning stove.

Guests’ meals depend on what they bring to cook and the “knick-knacks” and drinks sold by individuals on the beach. / El Artemiseño

A resident of San Cristóbal, a city in the municipality, the Artemisa native paid 40,000 pesos to a private individual to take him and his family to the beach along with everything they needed for a few days of camping. The experience, in short, was disappointing: “No area shows its best side,” another vacationer explained.

Contrary to what guests report, whose meals depend on what they bring to cook and the “junk food” and drinks sold by individuals on the beach, the campground director claims he has the resources to provide lunches and dinners, “but campers don’t ask for them; they cook for themselves,” something the newspaper doesn’t fully believe.

The same thing happens, it says, with the sale of toilet paper, liquor, and “other goods” that haven’t been sold to visitors. “Something kind of strange,” he admits. But the answer to these irregularities soon becomes clear: the workers’ conditions are appalling.

“We can’t do much to expand our offerings because we only have one vehicle, not in very good condition, and a monthly allocation of 20 liters of diesel. Any form of non-state management is also not permitted at the facility, and the workforce isn’t even 50% covered. Salaries are below 3,000 pesos,” explains the manager.

Under these conditions, it is not unusual for San Pedro to be on the way to disappearing, as happened with La Herradura, another nearby campsite that, according to El Artemiseño, “disappeared from the map” after being practically abandoned.

San Pedro isn’t the only one “with its days numbered.” Two years ago, the province had 310 lodges, but by the end of last May, there were 242 left. The chronic lack of resources and budget for a sector that is far from a priority for the state only worsens the situation. A capital injection could solve part of the problem, but thinking that a miracle investment could rescue the facilities, the newspaper acknowledges, is a “utopian dream.”

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‘They Treat Us Like Dogs’, Says a Cuban Reggaeton Singer Detained in Alligator Alcatraz

Former Miami Mayor Xavier Suarez and several local officials denounce the conditions of migrant detention.

The moment of arrest in Miami of the Cuban reggaeton singer Leamsy Izquierdo, ‘La Figura’. / Facebook

14ymedio bigger14ymedio Havana, 8 July 2025 – In the new migrants’ detention centre Alligator Alcatraz “they treat us like dogs”, said the Cuban reggaeton singer Leamsy Izquierdo, La Figura. “There’s nothing in the place, it’s not suitable for humans”.

The singer, who was detained last week by agents of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) in Miami, described for his girlfriend Katia Hernández by telephone the conditions in the migrants’ prison, which was inaugurated by US president Donald Trump on July 1st.

“We only get one meal a day, and sometimes they have maggots in them”, said the musician. According to judicial records, Izquierdo was admitted into the Turner Guilford Knight Correctional Center and bailed for 6,000 dollars for armed aggression. However, his freedom was blocked by a migrant detention order and he was detained by ICE.

La Figura said he doesn’t even know whether it’s day or night. “The lights are permanently on, 24 hours a day”. The Cuban also said that “the mosquitos are like elephants and there’s no water for washing. He asked that everything be made known to his lawyer so that he could post it onto Instagram.

Inside the complex, which has a total of 200 surveillance cameras, 8,500 metres of barbed wire, more than 400 guards and is surrounded by swamp, caymans and snakes to deter escape, the reggaeton singer says there are “more than 300 people who are suffering”. He added that there are a number of shortages. “There’s no medication for mental health issues”. continue reading

The first of Miami’s mayors to be born in Cuba, Xavier Suárez, protested against Alligator Alcatraz. “That installation is an environmental risk in a very fragile ecosystem”. He added that “the people are treated with the same rhetoric that they always use”.

On Tuesday, before the denouncements, Daniella Levine Cava – mayor of Miami-Dade County where the new detention centre is situated – demanded that the federal and state governments give her access to the site for monitoring purposes; last week legislators from Florida State were denied entry to the centre.

For their part, the environmental associations Friends of the Everglades and the Center for Biological Diversity pushed their legal demands that the centre should be closed because of its averse environmental impact.

“This country’s national parks are considered to be one of the United States’ best ideas but this massive detention centre in the heart of the Everglades is one of its worst ideas”, said Eve Samples, executive director of Friends of the Everglades and who leads the campaign Stop Alligator Alcatraz.

Translated by Ricardo Recluso

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Two Buildings Collapse Killing Four in Havana in Just a Few Hours

“This whole block needs to be knocked down and rebuilt again,” a neighbour in calle Monte told ’14ymedio’.

The authorities reported the death of two adults and a nine-year-old girl in calle Monte / Canal Habana.

14ymedio bigger14ymedio, Natalia López Moya, Havana, 12 July 2025 — A house in multiple occupation collapsed this Saturday morning in La Habana Vieja, leaving three dead under the rubble. A few hours before that in the Diez de Octubre neighbourhood another building “under demolition” also collapsed with three people in it and one of them died. Both these events bear witness to the state of the buildings in the capital and the helplessness of the people of Havana in the face of the ever accelerating collapse of the city. The authorities have provided incomplete, unclear and late information on both cases.

The collapse of the first building, located at 722 calle Monte between Rastro and Carmen, happened Saturday morning and the Havana authorities reported that at least three people, including a little nine-year-old girl, died when they were trapped in the rubble. The deceased were confirmed by the Asamblea Municipal del Poder Popular de La Habana Vieja on Facebook.

In spite of that, other official media, reporting more recently, not only have not yet reported the deaths, but have given assurances that the rescue work – with firemen, rescue workers, police and dog teams – is continuing, even though 14ymedio confirmed that the rubble has already been cleared from the avenue, traffic has restarted and rescue teams have left the location.

Teresa, an 82-year-old who lives in the street told 14ymedio that, “This whole block needs to be knocked down and rebuilt again. Most of the houses here have been declared unsafe, but people still live here because they have nowhere else to go.” The part which collapsed was above a shop which sold furniture a long time ago, and after that was a state hardware business and now sells different kinds of things, and “has had lots of problems with a leaky roof, leading to it being closed for a long time.”

14ymedio confirmed that the rubble has already been cleared from the street /14ymedio

The Havana house is one of the ones in the block that is propped up on the outside and inside with wooden beams. She told us “When my youngest grandson was born they told him they would find him somewhere so he could leave here. The kid is now 26, and nothing.” continue reading

Teresa didn’t know about the collapse until this morning. “I didn’t feel anything because I had a headache and took some sleeping pills and so I found out about the collapse this morning” she told this publication. “When I looked I saw the yellow tape and the rubble in the street.”

Although she didn’t know the victims, she said many people in the area are worried by the news of the deaths, and various plainclothes state security agents* (agents of the Seguridad del Estado, often surveilling critics of the regime) are posted in the street, watching what happens.

For Teresa seeing the rubble and the ruins has been a déjà vu, because just a year ago the house in calle Monte on the corner with Rastro was partially demolished after also suffering a collapse. “We had weeks with the dust getting in everywhere.”

On social media, the neighbours and the authorities published photos of the collapsed building, and also showing the fire trucks and other state vehicles as well as a pile of rubble blocking the street.

In the second collapse – Friday afternoon – in a house being demolished in calle San Bernardino, between Serrano and Durege, in Diez de Octubre municipality, one person was killed. “After midnight, the Rescue Brigade managed to remove the body of someone trapped under the rubble. The deceased, Roberto Álvarez Castillo, 60 years old, was a resident of Cerro municipality. His family who were there were fully helped by health specialists and local authorities, stated Tribuna de La Habana.

The publication added that two other people were found under the rubble, although they were not injured. Having found the body, “they became aware of the presence of two other people there and called off the search” in the three storey building, which was “old” and “was propped up”.

“Four months ago, part of the building fell down and today at 2:00 pm another part fell, but this time it cost the life of one of the workers removing some bricks. One was able to escape, but the other couldn’t” said a local resident in a Facebook post agreeing with the official version.

According to the authorities, “the building was uninhabited and in the course of being demolished going on for more than three months, and the people were there in spite of several no entry warnings from the neighbours and the authorities.” The Havana Channel (Canal Habana) added that work to rescue “the trapped people” is still continuing.

Destroyed by the authorities’ neglect and lack of interest, Havana is full of deadly locations and calle Monte is one of them. In June 2024, number 425, between Ángeles and Águila, partially collapsed, leaving a young person injured. Next door, the house at 423 also cost a man’s life four years ago, when one of its side walls collapsed.

“We can’t even sleep here, all of us living in this bit of the street are in danger” a neighbour said to us.

At the end of that month, after several days of storms, at least 19 buildings had partial or total collapses. This Friday, however, nothing happened which could be used as an excuse for the collapses: not one drop of water fell in the capital.

*Translator’s note: Agents of the Seguridad del Estado, who often surveil critics of the regime.

Translated by GH

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Washington Denounces the Torture of José Daniel Ferrer and Requests Proof of Life From the Cuban Regime

Since his return to prison last April, the opponent has suffered brutal ill-treatment and beatings, as reported by his family.

Secretary of State Marco Rubio also called for the release of political prisoners / EFE

14ymedio bigger14ymedio, Havana, July 12, 2025 — US Secretary of State Marco Rubio asked the Cuban regime on Friday for proof of life for opponent José Daniel Ferrer. The leader of the Patriotic Union of Cuba (UNPACU) was returned to prison in April, and since then both his family members and human rights organizations have denounced the torture he is subjected to at the Mar Verde prison in Santiago de Cuba.

“The Cuban regime continues to torture democracy activist José Daniel Ferrer. The United States demands an immediate proof of life and the release of all political prisoners,” Rubio wrote on his X account.

Just a few days ago, the Foundation for Human Rights in Cuba included five officers from the prison where Ferrer is serving his sentence in a database of Cuban repressors for their participation in acts of torture against the opponent.

Nelva Ismarays Ortega Tamayo, Ferrer’s wife, reported that the UNPACU leader had been brutally beaten on June 25 after declaring a hunger strike. Ferrer was protesting against ill-treatment, and he refused to wear the uniform of a common prisoner. “He was beaten everywhere: head, arms, legs, abdomen, back, kicked, slapped and punched, until he defecated,” said Ortega, who visited him on July 5. continue reading

The attack was led by Lieutenant Colonel Vladimir Pineda Guerra, head of the prison, and involved Colonel Adalberto Andreu Chacón, second in command

The attack was led by Lieutenant Colonel Vladimir Pineda Guerra, head of the prison, and involved Colonel Adalberto Andreu Chacón, second in command; Captain José Miguel Hechavarría Gorguet, head of Internal Order; Major José Luis Yáñez Herrera, head of Educational Treatment; and Captain Livan Laugart Riquelme, head of the Collective. All five officials have been added to the Foundation’s list of Cuban repressors.

The platform denounced other ill-treatment of Ferrer and said that six common prisoners had been used as “hitmen” to continue the attacks, in what it calls “a systematic repressive pattern against dissidents.” His fingers and wrists were also twisted; he was forced to drink milk in order to interrupt the strike, and toilet access was denied for two days. “The case of Ferrer once again shows that the Cuban penal system is not designed for reintegration or justice, but as a tool of political punishment,” said the Foundation.

Earlier this month, UNPACU also denounced the “systematic torture” of its leader and stated that he was in “grave danger.” “Severe beatings,” “simulated asphyxiation,” “denial of food, hygiene products and medicine,” “exposure to contagious diseases” and “death threats” were some of the abuses listed by the organization.

This Friday, on the fourth anniversary of the 11 July 2021 protests, the White House imposed sanctions against Miguel Díaz-Canel

Marco Rubio’s message not only comes at a time of tension over the abuse of the opposition leader, but follows the policy of putting pressure on the Cuban government that has been implemented by Washington in recent weeks.

This Friday, on the fourth anniversary of the 11 July 2021 protests, the White House imposed sanctions against Miguel Díaz-Canel for “serious human rights violations” for having ordered the repression of the demonstrators who protested throughout the Island on that date. This is the first time that the Cuban leader has been subjected to personal sanctions by Washington, which also affect the minister of the Revolutionary Armed Forces, Álvaro López Miera, and the Interior minister, Lázaro Alberto Álvarez Casas. All of them, including their immediate family members, are prohibited from entering the United States.

Translated by Regina Anavy

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Cuba Will Focus Its Efforts on the 2032 Olympics if It Can’t Participate in Los Angeles in 2028

INDER favors hiring abroad because athletes need to leave the Island to have access to better facilities.

The industry has lost the ability to make materials, and the sports base is lacking / EFE

14ymedio bigger14ymedio, Madrid, 11 July 2025 — Cuban sport apparently assumes that it will not attend the 2028 Olympic Games in Los Angeles. The statements of the first vice president of the National Institute of Sports, Physical Education and Recreation (INDER), Raúl Fornés, delve into a thesis already advanced by the Cuban Volleyball Federation (FCV) when, at the end of June, the US denied visas to the players of the national team. “If the US government maintains its policy of denying visas, as it has been doing by preventing us from attending competitions on its territory, we will simply not go and will do other things. It wouldn’t be the first time. We already missed Los Angeles in 1984; that city is unlucky for us,” he told Cubadebate.

The official gave an extensive interview to the official media on the eve of the approval, in the National Assembly next week, of the new sports law. He breaks down some of the novelties of the regulation, saying he will try to recover a splendor that is in the past, after ranking fifth in medals won by Cuban athletes at Barcelona 1992. The results, if he is successful, would be noticeable in Brisbane 2032, because – admits the official – he will have to go to Los Angeles with what there is. If he can.

“We’re focusing on it, training to be back among the top countries in the world”

“We are fully prepared to attend. We are focusing on it, training to be back among the top countries in the world. It’s a difficult and complex goal, but it’s our intention,” he said, settling the issue.

The new policy is based mainly on an increase in training in two areas: recruitment abroad and the recovery of the Higher Schools for Athletic Development (ESPA), which were deactivated in 2010.

Fornés says that this measure was an error of astronomical proportions whose results have very concrete figures. “We were losing about 1,500 talents every year. Every year. About 1,500. These are not invented or preliminary numbers: they’re concrete.” The official says that once athletes finish their training at the School of Sports Initiation (EIDE), they have only two paths: join a national team or leave the sport. The ESPA schools were a continue reading

natural link for young people from 18 years of age to adapt to professionalization, but their elimination has led them to a change of paradigm.

The new regulation will seek to “rebuild a training system that respects the natural processes of athletic development, avoiding abrupt leaps”

“We have already seen that this method does not always give good results; it happened to us and today is costing us dearly. Now we are going to rescue it; we intend to save it,” he said, pointing out that the new regulation will help “to rebuild a training system that respects the natural processes of athletic development, avoiding abrupt leaps which have proved counter-productive.”

Another fundamental point of the new policy is recruitment abroad, which Fornés has explained in detail, with special emphasis on the fact that INDER does not keep any remuneration corresponding to the athlete. “The athletes receive 100% of the contract and income. The Federation receives nothing from that part. What it does negotiate with the club that hires the athlete is between 10% and 20% for training rights,” he explained. The official mentioned this practice, common in many sports – among which is soccer, approved by FIFA – for which the club or federation that has invested years in the development of an athlete receives compensation.

“That’s something I wanted to clarify, because I know there is a lot of talk about it. Some think that the athletes contribute part of their salary, but that’s not true,” he remarked, avoiding comparisons with Cuban doctors on international missions, from whose salaries the government subtracts up to 90%, “to contribute to the health system,” it claims.

The balance towards the competitive result in international events is not yet up to par

According to the official, this system has worked well since it began to be implemented, but the results do not fully satisfy the authorities. “We have grown in the hiring of athletes and have improved the quality of many we hired, but the balance towards the competitive result in international events is still not up to par at this time. We continue to project; we are not going to give up,” he says. The scope of the shortages on the Island is such, argues Fornés, that it is necessary for athletes to leave Cuba to have access to better facilities, the appropriate technology and even competitive rivals.

The situation of the facilities is now in the eye of the hurricane after photos of some training centers went viral, including those of an EIDE facility, practically in ruins. “When I entered in 1997, in the middle of the Special Period, it was a hundred times better than now, 28 years later,” said INDER teacher Adriana Lazaga, regretting the oblivion to which athletes are subjected.

“Our best facilities date back to 1991, and even those no longer meet current requirements,” says Fornés in the interview. The official explains that the sports equipment industry, which was central to grassroots sport, is also among the many things that have collapsed. “That too must be admitted as an accumulated reality. For more than eight years, almost nine, we have been unable to guarantee basic sports resources for the teams,” he admitted.

There are currently 37 high performance sports in Cuba, something that is “impossible to maintain properly”

Since the means are not enough, and although the authorities have promised that the legislation will be accompanied by an economic endowment – which in the midst of the crisis is hard to believe – a very relevant point of the new sports policy will be the “prioritization” of disciplines. Currently, there are 37 high performance sports in Cuba, something that is “impossible to maintain adequately,” especially “when the elite of the world do not all receive medals, which is what ultimately positions Cuba internationally.”

The authorities will therefore focus their efforts on sports that have recently yielded results. “Today we are clearly establishing which sports will be prioritized; basically, those that place Cuba among the medalists of the Central American, Pan American and Olympic Games. These will receive real and consistent attention throughout their development pyramid,” said Fornés, without specifying a list, which should include wrestling, boxing, judo, taekwondo and athletics.

“If skating has never been practiced in Guantánamo, we cannot force them to skate”

As part of the strategy, the “regionalization principle” will also be used. “That is to say, a new concept, a new dimension.” For example, “If in Guantánamo, let’s say, skating has never been practiced, we cannot force them to practice skating nor tell them that ’you have to enroll in skating’.” The same applies to extremely expensive sports, such as hockey, which will have to remain in quarantine for lack of budget.

In recent years, Cuba has lost hundreds of athletes who prefer to try to make a living off the Island, which has decimated the teams and, consequently, the successes of national sport. The report of Cubadebate ends with the experiences of some hired abroad. In their messages, it is well understood why the number of athletes decreases, as happens in almost all professions. Some cite technical issues in their disciplines, but others measure the depth of the problem, like this statement by pitcher Liván Moinelo, who, speaking about the conditions, celebrates that in Japan, where he competes, “they have baseballs.”

Translated by Regina Anavy

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Five Officers Identified for Beating José Daniel Ferrer Are Included on the List of Cuban Repressors

The Foundation for Human Rights in Cuba denounces their direct involvement in acts of torture against the opposition.

Ferrer was brutally beaten on June 25, after declaring a hunger strike / UNPACU

14ymedio bigger14ymedio, Havana, July 10, 2025 — The Foundation for Human Rights in Cuba has included five prison officials from Mar Verde, Santiago de Cuba, in its database of Cuban Repressors for their direct participation in acts of torture against the opposition and prisoner of conscience José Daniel Ferrer García.

According to the wife of the leader of the Patriotic Union of Cuba (UNPACU), Nelva Ismarays Ortega Tamayo, Ferrer was brutally beaten on June 25, after declaring a hunger strike in protest of ill-treatment and to assert his refusal to wear the uniform of a common prisoner. “He was beaten everywhere: head, arms, legs, abdomen, back, kicked, slapped and punched, until he defecated on himself,” said Ortega after visiting him on July 5.

All five officials have been added to the list of Cuban Repressors

The attack was led by Lieutenant Colonel Vladimir Pineda Guerra, head of the penitentiary, and involved Colonel Adalberto Andreu Chacón, second in command; Captain José Miguel Hechavarría Gorguet, head of Internal Order; Major José Luis Yáñez Herrera, head of Educational Treatment; and Captain Livan Laugart Riquelme, head of the Collective. All five officers have been placed on the list of Cuban repressors.

In addition to the initial beating, Ferrer was subjected to more physical and psychological punishment. According to the complaint, six common prisoners were allegedly used as “hitmen” to continue the aggression, as “a systematic repressive pattern against dissidents.” His fingers and wrists were also twisted; he was forced to drink milk in order to stop fasting, and he was deprived of basic hygiene for at least 48 hours. continue reading

They are accused of violating Rule 1 of the UN Mandela Rules

“They are accused of crimes against humanity by torture and persecution for political reasons, in addition to violating Rule 1 of the UN Mandela Rules and Article 5 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights,” said the Foundation.

The Foundation sees these abuses as a reprisal by the Cuban regime for the humanitarian campaign that Ferrer launched from his home in the Altamira neighborhood of Santiago de Cuba, before his re-incarceration in April this year. At that time, his release from prison in January, awarded as part of an agreement brokered by the Vatican, was revoked.

Lieutenant Colonel Vladimir Pineda Guerra has already been on the list of Cuban Repressors since 2023, when he was held responsible for keeping Ferrer incommunicado for more than three months.

The Foundation attaches the files of each officer with detailed documentation and photographs

In its publication, the Foundation attaches the files of each officer with detailed documentation and photographs. It charges them with beatings, physical abuse, intimidation, threats and violations of international humanitarian law.

Since its inception, the Foundation has sought to make visible those directly responsible for repression on the Island. Inclusion in its database means that these individuals could face future legal consequences if they are tried in international courts for their actions.

“Ferrer’s case once again shows that the Cuban penitentiary system is not designed for reintegration or justice, but as a tool of political punishment,” concludes the report.

Translated by Regina Anavy

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After the Island-Wide Protests of 11 June 2021, the Cuban Regime Entered the Stage of Impudence

At that moment, decades of pretending to be good-natured towards the international community and denying any repressive act towards citizens were broken.

The images made it clear that they didn’t have overwhelming support from the people, nor did they hesitate to pick up a weapon. / EFE

14ymedio bigger14ymedio, Yoani Sánchez, Generation Y, 11 July 2025 — Like any date that leaves a profound mark, every Cuban knows what they were doing when they learned of the protests of July 11, 2021 (11J). Those who followed the demonstrations on their mobile phones thousands of miles from the island and those who joined the sea of people who filled the streets shouting “Freedom!” There are also those who, in their military units, enlisted to go out and beat and suppress the crowd. Each one has their own story from that day, many of these anecdotes remain silenced out of fear.

Along with the more than 2,000 Cubans criminally prosecuted for 11J, of whom 421 remain in prison, one of the results of that historic day was the evolution of the regime to a new stage. If before that moment, Havana’s Plaza de la Revolución had worked diligently to create an image of a system “of the humble and for the humble,” that Sunday four years ago, that mask fractured. Before the eyes of the world, desperate people demanded change, and riot police responded with clubs and, in some neighborhoods, even gunfire.

The country’s own leader, Miguel Díaz-Canel, shook off any veneer of composure and uttered before national television a fateful phrase that will go down in history: “The combat order is given.” In that instant, decades of pretense of goodwill toward the international community and emphatic denials of any repressive acts toward citizens were shattered. It was a turning point for many who, despite frequent denunciations by activists and independent journalists, continued to believe that the Cuban system was incapable of forcefully punishing a popular and largely peaceful demonstration.

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Coercion is public, it is not hidden and it is so widespread that even those who claim not to get involved in politics feel it.

Also, many who swallowed the narrative of a country where ideological uniformity had been consensually established and where the Communist Party enjoyed unanimous support understood that, beneath the slogans and masks, social unrest had been growing for more than half a century. That day, something cracked in the narrative created and polished by Castro’s skillful ideologues since January 1959. The images made it clear that they neither enjoyed overwhelming support from the people nor did they hesitate to take up arms against the dissidents.

Since then, Cubans have lived in an era of repressive audacity. The coercion is public, unseen, and so widespread that even those who claim not to interfere in politics feel it. President Díaz-Canel no longer pretends to govern for everyone, nor are official spokespersons ashamed to openly threaten dissidents with imprisonment or exile. The shamelessness has reached such levels that some figures in the regime are issuing thinly veiled threats on social media against internet users who denounce everything from the dollarization of part of the retail sector to problems with garbage collection. They no longer hesitate to bare their teeth, unbuckle their belts, and threaten them with iron bars.

11 June left us a legacy of rebellion and a lamentable number of political prisoners, but it also enshrined the shamelessness of a system that will not hesitate to crush its own people again.

Editor’s Note: This article was originally  published on DW  and is republished with the author’s license.
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A Book Rescues the Memory of More Than 600 Victims of Forced Disappearance in Cuba

Historian Daniel I. Pedreira exposes how Castroism literally erased those who opposed it.

Images of Andrew de Graux Villafaña, a US citizen on his father’s side, who joined the Escambray guerrillas to fight against Castroism. / Martí Noticias

14ymedio bigger14ymedio, Yunior García Aguilera, Madrid, July 11, 2025 — In Los desaparecidos del castrismo, Cuba desde 1959 (The Disappeared of Castroism, Cuba since 1959), historian Daniel I. Pedreira delivers a work as painful as it is essential. Against the tide of silence imposed by the Cuban regime, Pedreira delves into one of the darkest and least documented aspects of the Island’s contemporary history: the forced disappearance of citizens opposed to Fidel Castro’s regime.

Through more than 600 cases, the author exposes how Castroism has used disappearances as a tool of repression and social control, publicly denying their existence while threatening and persecuting those who try to clarify the truth. Pedreira stresses that the majority of the victims were young people, which represents not only a human tragedy but also a mutilation of the future of the Cuban nation. The book aims to rescue their memory, break the imposed silence and pave the way for justice and national reconciliation.

The work is based on collaboration with organizations such as Archivo Cuba, the Instituto de la Memoria Histórica Cubana contra el Totalitarismo and the Asociación de Familiares de Cubanos Desaparecidos, as well as key witnesses. Despite the impossibility of accessing official documents of the regime, the author has managed to gather a solid basis of evidence with historical, judicial and forensic value. Pedreira hopes the book will reach international human rights institutions in order to dismantle the official narrative of continue reading

Castroism and raise awareness about the magnitude of the phenomenon. Its publication and presentation in Miami, at the Encuentro Internacional con el Libro Cubano Exiliado, on July 19-20, marks a milestone in documenting the human cost of repression on the Island.

The author has managed to gather a solid basis of evidence with historical, judicial and forensic value

Far from being limited to political denunciation, the author builds a solid investigation that disproves the myth that ideological regimes like the Cuban do not commit extrajudicial crimes or systematic disappearances. Pedreira reveals how the absolute control of institutions has allowed Castroism to literally erase those who oppose it, often without leaving a physical or documentary trace.

One of the most moving cases is that of Andrew de Graux Villafaña, a young guerrilla fighter who, at just 18 years old, was wounded, captured and eventually disappeared by the regime’s forces. The history, reconstructed from family and medical testimonies, exposes the machinery of concealment and dehumanization that characterizes this type of regime. The tireless struggle of his sister Mary Louise, even decades later, is a symbol of moral resistance to institutionalized oblivion.

Pedreira delves into one of the darkest and least documented aspects of the Island’s contemporary history / Courtesy

The work also includes the names and stories of other missing persons such as the brothers Pedrozo and Becerra, Orlando Collazo, Lázaro Fernández, Carlos M. Ibáñez and Alberto Sigas. Each case, accurately and respectfully reported, contributes to a portrait of collective pain that has been systematically silenced.

Pedreira points out that disappearances continue in present-day Cuba, either through direct repression or as a result of the conditions imposed by the dictatorship, which forces thousands of people to migrate along dangerous routes. Young people recruited for wars by others, migrants who disappeared at sea or in the jungle, citizens who never reached their destination: all of them are victims of a system that continues to take lives.

One of the book’s great successes is its dual approach. On the one hand, it provides concise data -dates, names, places- making it an invaluable source for researchers, historians, lawyers and human rights defenders. On the other, it does not forget the human component. Each entry is an act of memory, a symbolic tombstone for those who did not have a burial.

Disappearances continue in present-day Cuba, either through direct repression or as a result of the conditions imposed by the dictatorship.

The work is also part of a wider tradition of recovering historical memory in dictatorial contexts, as happened in former East Germany or in the Latin American Southern Cone.

Pedreira recognizes the limitations imposed by the regime’s permanence in power, but he establishes an ethical and historiographical starting point for the future.

The Disappeared of Castroism is a necessary book. Not only for its documentary contribution, but because it rescues from oblivion those whom the regime wanted to erase. With this work, Pedreira returns a face, voice and dignity to hundreds of Cubans who disappeared because they dreamed of a different country. As the author warns, many of them were young people, representatives of “the Cuba of the future,” and with them, a part of that future also disappeared.

Translated by Regina Anavy

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Is a Third Alternative for Cuba Possible?

At the beginning of the revolutionary process it was said that the means of production belonged to the workers and that the land belonged to those who worked it.

Only 20 or 30 people in the Party-State leadership have a real productive interest in the Cuban economic model / Cubadebate

14ymedio bigger14ymedio, Ariel Hidalgo, Miami, 12 July 2025 — In 1988, when the collapse of the socialist camp and the failure of the model implemented by the communist parties were already visible, Francis Fukuyama drew attention with a dissertation which he later published in book form. The End of History? stated categorically that “the end point of the ideological evolution of humanity” had occurred, and that, except for capitalism, there was no “alternative political-economic structure” that could resolve fundamental human contradictions.

But two years later, three US airlines went out of business in the middle of labor conflicts, and in the following decade, a global economic crisis as severe as that of the Crash of 1929 broke out. Capitalism has an intrinsic contradiction between capitalists who pursue greater profits, and wage earners who desire better wages.

However, this model, even with its conflicts, has been able to sustain itself. This is not the case of centralized economies.

Why did countries in Eastern Europe like Yugoslavia, Hungary, Czechoslovakia and Poland rebel and break away from the socialist camp, with Soviet troops having to invade or threaten an invasion? They all ended up returning to a capitalist economy.

Why did the Soviet Union resort to a perestroika reform and then disintegrate, only to take each village on a path away from the ideals of the hammer and sickle?

Why did China and Vietnam have to abandon the intransigent fanaticism that kept them in poverty and then move closer to the West and implement free market elements? continue reading

Why did China and Vietnam have to abandon the intransigent fanaticism that kept them in poverty and then move closer to the West and implement free market elements?

And in return, why is it that a country like Cuba, which was the first sugar producer in the world; the third largest livestock-producing country of Latin America after Argentina and Uruguay; with the Cuban peso on par with the dollar; a per capita higher than countries like Spain, Austria and Japan; with more American immigrants than Cuban emigrants in the United States, is today the poorest country on the continent?

All these questions have an answer: because the model they shared, which some still maintain, is irrational and counterproductive for economic development. When the State absorbs all means of production, it is forced to generate a caste of thousands of officials that it can’t control and thus becomes a bureaucratic monster. In audits, words such as “missing” and “diversion of resources” are very common.

Since these officials are not the owners of these enterprises, they lack a real productive incentive, but they exploit them as if they were their own and waste the resources as if they were someone else’s. In technical terms, we could say that a contradiction is created between State ownership and the private appropriation by these officials. So you understand why Fidel Castro, already on the threshold of the end of his life, recognized: “The Cuban model doesn’t work, not even for Cubans.”

Who, then, are the only ones who really have a true productive interest in this model? Because, at most, there are only 20 or 30 people in the leadership of the Party-State, whereas in capitalism there are hundreds or thousands of people who have a real interest: the capitalists. This comparison is not mine; it comes from the liberals, in particular the late Cuban writer, Carlos Alberto Montaner.

If capitalism has an intrinsic contradiction between capitalists and wage earners, in these regimes of monopolistic State centralism there are two, because not only does the contradiction exist between the true owner, that is, the State, and the workers, but also the one generated between that State and its bureaucrats.

However, taking to its ultimate consequences the comparison of Montaner between that supposed socialism with only 20 or 30 interested in productivity and the hundreds or thousands of capitalism, we could ask: How will it be when this productive interest has millions, and there is not one or two internal contradictions, but none?

If capitalism has an intrinsic contradiction between capitalists and wage earners, in these regimes of State monopolistic centralism there are two

But… would such a society be possible?

Generally in a capitalist economy the result of the total value obtained in each production cycle can be divided into three parts:

– Productive capital, which is used to secure everything needed for the next cycle, such as raw materials, wages, wear and tear of labor instruments, and the surplus product that is reinvested to expand the value of the next cycle.

– Profit capital, the part devoted to covering all the private expenses of the capitalist.

– And taxes, for the maintenance of the collective needs of the whole community.

In an economy almost totally nationalized, there would be no capitalists, and there is supposed to be no profit capital, so we could say that the tax and this profit capital merge into one destination: the State, which supposedly represents the whole society.

At the beginning of the revolutionary process it was said that the means of production belonged to the workers and that the land belonged to those who worked it, phrases which were gradually replaced by another: “The property of all society.” Who represented that society? Well, the State. In practice, what was done was to replace the monopolies with a single one and the private landowners with an absolute one: that State, which concentrated 70 per cent of arable land in its hands.

Well, if the workers were the owners of the factories, that lucrative capital previously received by the capitalists should have been distributed among these workers, who should also have representatives in the administrations, something which can still be implemented in State enterprises.

If the farmers are to be the owners of the land, there should not be a monopoly that forces them to sell to the State at the price imposed by the State, since it is unusual for a buyer to force a seller to become an exclusive or main customer, with the price of the goods also imposed by force. This is called unfair treatment, and the result is the absence of a real productive stimulus. Here is the definition of monopoly given by Martí: “The monopoly is an implacable giant sitting at the gates of all the poor.”

If land is distributed with a guarantee that it will not then be expropriated, and farmers are given the freedom to sell their products to those they choose and at a price agreed between producer and buyer; if they are provided with farming implements, seeds, fertilizers and all other inputs, as well as agricultural transport so that the fruits do not rot in the fields, the markets will be filled with fruits and vegetables, which by their number will have an affordable price, and there will be no plate in any household that is empty at mealtime.

When the country claims to not have enough resources to provide every agricultural worker with all these means, we must answer them once and for all: “Liars!”

When the country claims to not have enough resources to provide every agricultural worker with all these means, we must answer them once and for all: “Liars!” Because less than 3% of the national budget is allocated to agriculture, while more than 30% is devoted to tourism, whose failure is increasingly evident by the decreasing number of visitors. Why? Because the network of luxury hotels, like isolated oases in the middle of a desert, belie that fantasy.

Any autonomous production practice, be it self-employment, independent cooperatives or self-management groups, where no one is exploited by other human beings, be they capitalists, State bureaucrats or other workers, is the third alternative.

What would Cuba be like with such a model in not many years?  The consequences of these benefits would be not only for workers, but for society as a whole. Without exaggerating, the only problem we Cubans would have is that of the migratory waves, which instead of crossing the Rio Grande, would try to cross the Caribbean Sea to reach the Island.

Translated by Regina Anavy

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The US arrests 10 Cubans with I-220A and sends them to Alligator Alcatraz

Jhon Eduardo Hernández, Denis Durán Dávila and Hermes Sánchez López were arrested after appearing in Immigration Court in Miami.

Migrants with chains and padlocks prior to their transfer to the Alligator Alcatraz prison / X/@AGJamesUthmeie

14ymedio bigger14ymedio, Havana, 11 July  2025 — “If he’s deported to Cuba, he’ll kill himself,” says the wife of Cuban Jhon Eduardo Hernández, who was arrested last Wednesday after going to the immigration court in Miami and was then taken to “Alligator Alcatraz.” According to Adriana Rodríguez, that same day they arrested nine other Cubans with Form I-220A, known as the Order of Parole, including Denis Durán Dávila and Hermes Sánchez López. “It is quite inhumane what is happening with people who are working, paying taxes, doing everything correctly,” the woman stated.

None of the Cubans get bail, so they will have to appeal their case for asylum while in prison. Hernandez is afraid of being deported. He has told his wife that he has talked to some of the prisoners, and most agree that “there is no solution for them” and that “they won’t be released.” In addition, the conditions under which they are held are depressing.

Cuban reggaeton artist Leamsy Izquierdo, La Figura, who is also being held in the new immigration detention center, reported previously that they “are being treated like dogs.” Inmates are “given only one meal a day, sometimes with worms,” and the “lights stay on for 24 hours.” Also, “the mosquitoes look like elephants, and there is no water for bathing or flushing the toilets, which are overflowing.”

According to attorney Wilfredo Allen, the Trump administration is “creating fear and threatening people.” The lawyer told Univision journalist Javier Díaz that the US government has issued an order to arrest 3,000 people a day. continue reading

Data obtained by the Cato Institute reveal that “two thirds of the migrants admitted to the detention centers of the Immigration and Customs Control Service (ICE) during this fiscal year had not been convicted of any crime” and that “most do not pose a serious threat to public safety.”

A group of migrants detained by ICE in Florida / X / @AGJamesUthmeier

The Cato Institute stresses that “violent criminals, such as murderers, rapists and pedophiles, accounted for less than 7% of ICE’s arrests.” The figures confirm that immigration authorities increased the number of arrests of persons without criminal convictions from 448 per day to 927 per day in the first two weeks of June.

Cuban real estate agent Denis Duran Davila was arrested after going to the court. The case of this young man went viral on social networks after his mother knelt before ICE agents to beg them not to deport him. Attorney Wilfredo Allen stated that his client, a person who “has no criminal offenses, is producing, giving to society and following the rules of the game, was arrested.”

The wife of Hermes Sanchez Lopez confirmed her husband’s arrest after attending the court in Miami. She pointed out that the migrant entered the US in 2020 and has no record, and ICE transferred him to Alligator Alcatraz.

ICE arrests have been reported by several groups, such as Detention Resistance in San Diego. Barbara Stone, an American, is a member of the group and was arrested last Tuesday for recording a video with her cell phone of the transfer of a migrant. A female ICE officer reported the 71-year-old woman for pushing her.

Stone was handcuffed and held for eight hours. Upon being released, she told NBC 7 that her cell phone had not been returned. She showed a bruise to the media and said she felt “mentally and physically traumatized.”

Ruth Méndez, another Detention Resistance volunteer, noted that “fear is very, very real here. Every American should know that this is how their taxpayers’ money is being spent, and it’s really a shame. The people who are really suffering are those seeking asylum.”

Translated by Regina Anavy

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Washington Sanctions Cuban President Miguel Díaz-Canel for the First Time, on the Fourth Anniversary of the ’11J’ Protests

  • The measures also affect the Ministers of the Interior and the Armed Forces and restrict the entry into the US of their relatives.
  • Foreign Minister Bruno Rodriguez says that Washington “does not have the capacity to bend the will of the people or its leaders.”
The Cuban president, appointed by Raúl Castro, unleashed a brutal repression after saying “the order of combat has been given”/ Screen capture

14ymedio biggerEFE/14ymedio, Washington/Havana, 11 July 2025 — The United States government imposed sanctions on Cuban president Miguel Díaz-Canel this Friday for his direct responsibility in “serious human rights violations” after ordering the repression of the 11 July 2021 Island-wide social outburst (’11J’). The measure, announced by the State Department, marks the first time that the Cuban president – hand-picked by Raúl Castro and head of the Communist Party – is subject to personal sanctions from Washington for having unleashed a brutal repression after announcing, four years ago on national television, that “the order of combat has been given.”

The restrictions also affect the Minister of the Revolutionary Armed Forces, Álvaro López Miera, and the Minister of the Interior, Lázaro Alberto Álvarez Casas. All of them, including their immediate family members, are prohibited from entering the United States.

The sanctions are imposed under a section of the State Department Appropriations Act for fiscal year 2025

“The United States will never forget the tenacity of the Cuban people four years ago in demanding freedom and a future free from tyranny,” a senior State Department official told the Miami Herald. According to the official statement, sanctions are imposed under a section of the State Department’s Appropriations Act for fiscal year 2025 that denies entry to foreign officials involved in significant corruption or human rights violations.

Díaz-Canel, who had so far avoided personal sanctions despite repeated condemnations of the Cuban regime for repression and censorship, thus becomes the highest official sanctioned by the US since the 11J protests. continue reading

Until this Friday, the measures had been addressed to police, military leaders, and prosecutors, but not to the president.

For its part, the regime dismissed the sanctions and said that Washington “has no capacity to crush” the Cuban people and their leaders. “The US is capable of imposing migratory sanctions against revolutionary leaders and maintaining a prolonged and ruthless economic war against Cuba,” denounced the Minister of Foreign Affairs, Bruno Rodríguez, on the social network X.

The action coincides with a new wave of repression on the eve of the anniversary of the protests. In municipalities such as San Antonio de los Baños -where the uprising began in 2021- several demonstrators released from prison have been harassed, threatened and subjected to police surveillance. Arrests and strong street surveillance are also reported in many provinces.

The US visa restrictions announced this Friday also affect judicial and prison officials who are “responsible for or accomplices of unjust detention and torture” of the demonstrators. For confidentiality, their names were not disclosed.

Among those now included are luxury hotels recently opened in Havana, such as the controversial Torre K

As part of the new sanctions package, the State Department also added 11 Cuban hotels to its Prohibited Accommodation List, which includes facilities controlled by the Gaesa military conglomerate. Among those now included are luxury hotels recently opened in Havana, such as the controversial Torre K [Tower K], managed by the Spanish Iberostar, whose construction was widely criticized for coinciding with the food and health crisis of the country.

Since the outbreak of the 11J protests, more than 1,400 people have been arrested according to human rights organizations, and 421 are still serving long sentences, while hundreds more live under constant harassment. The international community has repeatedly denounced the use of fabricated charges, summary trials and inhuman conditions in Cuban prisons.

“The Cuban regime must know that the cost of repression is not forgotten and does not disappear,” said the US official. “These sanctions are a clear message: those who commit abuses will pay a price.”

Translated by Regina Anavy

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The Guatemalan Police Arrested 25 Cubans Who Were Trying To Reach the US

Migrants were arrested in two separate operations and handed over to immigration authorities.

One of the groups of Cubans arrested during their crossing through Guatemala / @PNCdeGuatemala

14ymedio bigger14ymedio, Mexico City, July 10, 2025 — The National Civil Police (PNC) of Guatemala arrested 25 Cubans and two Cameroonians who illegally entered the country in two separate operations. “The migrants were transported in inhuman conditions,” they said on social networks. In addition, two coyotes were arrested.

The first group was intercepted at kilometer 140 on the route connecting with El Salvador. Officers from the Ports, Airports and Border Posts Division stopped the vehicle with P-126KLP plates for a routine check. The driver, who identified himself as Aníbal “N”, 31 years old, was arrested for the crime of illegal trafficking of persons.

Six undocumented Cubans were found inside the vehicle and handed over to the Guatemalan Migration Institute. The immigration authorities specified that the Cubans, who must have a visa to transit through the Central American country, will be able to process the document in the facilities where they are held.

Gelver, a coyote, was arrested while transporting 17 Cubans and two Cameroonians / @PNCdeGuatemala

Also, at kilometer 162 on route CA2 from Mazatenango, in Suchitepéquez, police from the Directorate-General for the Analysis of Narcotic Information stopped a Toyota Rav4 truck with registration number P879DNG, in which they found 17 Cubans and two Cameroonians who were trying to reach the United States. “Among the group were three minors who were dehydrated.”

According to data provided by the Guatemalan authorities, the driver of the van, 26-year-old Gelver, was arrested for the crime of smuggling migrants. “He had a pistol with a license to carry and two cell phones.”

Guatemala is reviewing the identity of all migrants who enter the country illegally and are intercepted. Their security protocols also affect aliens entering legally by air, land or sea. The review determines whether or not entry into Guatemalan territory is authorized.

Lack of a visa, presentation of a false visa, having a passport of dubious origin or a history of child sexual abuse can be grounds for non-admission, according to the authorities.

Translated by Regina Anavy

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In the Cuban National Health System, Those Who Do Not Pay Either Wait or Die

A report by Casa Palanca reveals concrete data on the structural corruption that extends from the orderly to the doctors.

Cuba spends just 2.1% of the state budget on health and social assistance / Casa Palanca

14ymedio bigger14ymedio, Madrid, 10 July 2025 — Under the title Silent Privatization: Practices of Corruption in the Cuban National Health System, the independent platform Casa Palanca has published exhaustive and demolishing research that unmasks the structural deterioration of the health system on the Island, and documents with names, data and witness statements the transition from “guaranteed right” to “conditional service.”

The work is based on a national survey of 2,141 people prepared by Cubadata, dozens of interviews with patients, doctors, nurses and family members, as well as official statistical sources and current legal documents. Its central finding is not new, but it is striking: the National Health System (SNS), formally free and universal, operates de facto under a highly corrupt market logic, where those who do not pay either wait or die.

According to the report, 74.3 per cent of respondents reported having had to pay for services or medicines allegedly free of charge, and 78 per cent admitted using personal contacts to obtain medical care. Corruption is not an anecdote, but an installed structure: from stretcher-bearers and food workers to doctors and service managers. continue reading

More than half of respondents (56.9%) said they make these payments “always or often,” with Havana leading the way (66.6%). By region, it is as follows: West (58.8%), East (55.8%) and Center (51.9%).

The most informal “priced” services are obtaining medicines, surgical procedures and diagnostic tests with medical equipment

The most informal “priced” services are obtaining medicines (57.6%), surgical procedures (27.9%) and diagnostic tests with medical equipment (10%). Even interventions such as cesarean sections, abortions or treatment of fibroids require the disbursement of sums between 25,000 and 45,000 CUP (65 to 117 dollars, depending on the black market exchange rate), without counting the inputs that must be purchased from outside the system.

The paradox is brutal. Cuba allocates just 2.1% of the state budget to health and social assistance, but maintains 24,000 doctors working in 56 countries, which in 2022 reported revenues of $4.882 billion, according to official data. Of these, between 75% and 90% of the salaries paid by the recipient governments remain in the coffers of the Cuban State.

Meanwhile, national pharmacies have a shortage of more than 50% of the basic list of medicines, and hospitals show signs of abandonment, with collapsed ceilings, rodents, closed rooms and poor hygiene, documented in multiple independent reports.

The report intersperses the figures with shattering testimonies: an anesthesiologist who operates with stored supplies “for my own family,” a neonatal nurse who admits delaying care to patients without “recommendations,” or a patient who had to give two pigs to the doctors for a hernia operation. Others, like Alexis Dominguez, are waiting for urgent surgery while paying up to $150 just to be put on a list.

The situation of women is even more outrageous. The chapter dedicated to gynecology and obstetrics documents payments for cesarean sections, abortions, regulation of periods and even a minimum medical protocol during delivery. A young woman, for example, paid 10,000 pesos to have her cesarean section performed because her baby was in danger, after 36 hours of labor. “Paying gives you the ability to be demand,” she says bluntly.

The research highlights that the most alarming thing is not the existence of corruption, but its normalization. Almost 83% of respondents believe that corruption in health is “widespread” or “very widespread,” and more than 52% say they have stopped seeking medical care due to illegal payments.

The report qualifies this phenomenon as a form of institutionalized violence, which is exercised not only by action but also by omission

The report qualifies this phenomenon as a form of institutionalized violence, which is exercised not only by action (improper charges, mistreatment and negligence) but also by omission (inefficiency, endless waiting and lack of resources). “What used to be a right is today a privilege,” she summarizes crudely.

The authorities, for their part, have chosen to minimize the problem. Miguel Díaz-Canel acknowledged in April 2025 that there are “negative trends” such as the illegal sale of services, but he limited himself to calling for them to be addressed “forcefully.” In the absence of a structural strategy, the government only punishes isolated cases, without admitting that corruption is the direct result of low wages, lack of resources and chronically low investment by the state.

The study concludes that the Cuban SNS is not being privatized in the classical sense, but in practice. Health no longer depends on the state, but on the patient’s pocket or contacts. And what is more worrisome, even newly graduated doctors are deserting, invalidating their degrees rather than practicing in these conditions. Between 2021 and 2023, more than 63,800 health professionals left the system.

“Your health service is free… but it costs money.” The poster at the entrance of some hospitals might seem like a cruel joke. But in Cuba, where pain and disease have become a product of the black market, that irony is already an undeniable truth.

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.

While Protecting Criminals, Havana Updates Its List of ‘Terrorists’, Which Includes ‘Influencers’

In total, the government identifies 62 individuals and 20 organizations, mostly based in the US.

Víctor Álvarez presented the updated list to the international press / Screen capture

14ymedio bigger14ymedio/EFE, Havana, 10 July 2025 — This Wednesday, the government of Cuba gave the secretary general of the UN, António Guterres, an updated list of people whom it considers terrorists, which includes activists, historical leaders in exile and foreign-based influencers. The Cuban regime asks the countries with which it has relations to cooperate in their arrest and extradition.

At a press conference with foreign media, the authorities stated that a version already existed, published in the Official Gazette in December 2023. Four names of people who died last year have now been deleted, and some new ones have been added.

In total, the Government identifies 62 individuals and 20 organizations, mostly based in the United States, as terrorists. Among the new entities is the Council for the Anti-Communist War of the Cuban opponent Manuel Milanés. The list repeats influencers and YouTubers like Álex Otaola, Paparazzi Cubano, Ultrack and Eliécer Avila.

The document also includes a wide range of names of people investigated for the explosions in hotels and resorts in Cuba in the nineties, such as Pedro Ramón Crispín Rodríguez and José Francisco Hernández Calvo, and historical political leaders from the Miami exile community, such as Orlando Gutiérrez Boronat, coordinator of the Assembly of the Cuban Resistance. continue reading

Among the new names are Armando Labrador and Seriocha Humberto, of the organization Cuba Primero, as well as Rolando Miguel Pérez Ruiz and Leordan Cruz Góme

Among the new names are Armando Labrador and Seriocha Humberto, of the organization Cuba Primero; Rolando Miguel Pérez Ruiz and Leordan Cruz Gómez, accused of “introducing weapons, ammunition and equipment along the north coast of Matanzas”; and Hamlet Pedraza Rivas, related to acts of sabotage in Villa Clara.

The deputy chief of the Specialized Body of the Criminal Investigation Directorate of the Ministry of the Interior, Víctor Álvarez, told the press that all the names have open trials or are in expert stages within the country.

Although he did not mention them directly, Alvarez charged the influencers on the list, saying that they carry out acts of “cyberterrorism” with an “excessive use of social networks to incite violence” and generate “opinion matrices” contrary to the Government. Similarly, several of them were singled out for allegedly financing violent activities in the country.

Also, Josefina Vidal, Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs, accused the US of “inaction” for not collaborating with Cuba in the fight against terrorism.

“The US government, in particular the Secretary of State [Cuban-American Marco Rubio] has put these mechanisms in a standstill, which showed in the past that, despite differences, it is possible to cooperate against a scourge of global scope,” she stated.

Vidal also accused the US of having a “cynical” attitude and “paradoxically” designating Cuba as a state sponsor of terrorism (…) when any astute and impartial observer can conclude which government is actually encouraging, supports and tolerates terrorism, and which country is confronting it and fighting it at the same time that it has been a victim of this scourge for over 60 years.”

Washington bases its decision on Havana’s refusal to extradite members of the ELN who were in Cuba negotiating peace when the organization attacked the Bogota Cadet School

The US has kept Cuba at different times on the list of states that sponsor terrorism and says that the Island doesn’t cooperate against terrorism. The list ,which has more consequences, has been in effect since 2017 to the present. During the last week of the Biden administration, there was an agreement between Washington and Havana, mediated by the Vatican and never recognized by the parties, in which the Regime committed to releasing more than 500 prisoners. More than half of the beneficiaries were ordinary prisoners, and three of the political prisoners who left prison have been returned: Donaida Pérez, José Daniel Ferrer and Félix Navarro.

Washington bases its decision on Havana’s refusal to extradite members of the ELN who were in Cuba negotiating peace when the organization attacked the Bogotá Cadet School, killing 23 people. Also on the Island are William “Guillermo” Morales, a Puerto Rican independence activist who was sentenced to ten years in prison in 1979 for making bombs-one of them killed four people at a tavern in New York in 1975- and Joanne Chesimard, known as Assata Shakur, sentenced for the murder of a New Jersey state policeman in 1973, who also found refuge in Castro’s Cuba and for whom Washington offers up to $2 million for information leading to her capture.

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.