No menu items!

COSTA RICA'S LEADING ENGLISH LANGUAGE NEWSPAPER

HomeLatin AmericaCubaCuba Accuses US of Extorting Latin American Countries

Cuba Accuses US of Extorting Latin American Countries

Cuba accused the United States on Thursday of extorting countries in Latin America and the Caribbean to cancel medical cooperation agreements with Havana in order to strangle the island’s economy. The dispatch of medical brigades abroad remains the main source of foreign currency for Cuba’s communist government, bringing in 7 billion dollars in 2025 according to official figures. Last year about 24,000 Cuban doctors and other health professionals worked in 56 countries.

In recent months Guatemala, Honduras, Jamaica and Guyana have ended those agreements, some of which had allowed Cuban health personnel to operate for more than 25 years. “The US government pursues, pressures and extorts other governments to end the presence of Cuban Medical Brigades in various countries, under false pretexts,” Cuban Foreign Minister Bruno Rodríguez wrote.

Rodríguez added that the US government’s objectives and its diplomatic and media campaign aim to continue encircling the Cuban economy and cutting off legitimate sources of income in order to asphyxiate the Cuban people. The administration of President Donald Trump applies a policy of maximum pressure against Cuba.

It has blocked petroleum exports to the island since US forces removed Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro in early January. Maduro had been Havana’s main ally. Washington has also threatened sanctions against countries that send oil to Cuba.

That measure has deepened Cuba’s economic and energy crisis, which has brought frequent and prolonged blackouts. Last week Trump made an exception and allowed a Russian tanker to deliver 730,000 barrels of crude, the first cargo to reach the island in three months.

The Republican leader has not hidden his desire for regime change in Cuba, located only 150 kilometers from the United States. According to Washington the island poses an exceptional threat because of its close ties with Russia, China and Iran.

Forced labor

Rodríguez spoke after the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR) released a report on Tuesday that denounces serious human rights violations in Cuba’s international medical missions. The violations include wage withholding from participants, threats of prison terms of up to eight years for those who abandon the missions, and confiscation of passports.

In an interview, IACHR President Edgar Stuardo Ralón said there are grounds to describe several practices in the program as forced labor and human trafficking. “It is a situation of dramatic helplessness that ignores the concept of decent work and treatment, as if the participants were treated in a totally abusive manner, forced to follow rules, turned into entities that lack the minimum inherent to every person,” Ralón added.

According to Cuban official statistics cited in the IACHR report, island professionals receive only between 2.5 percent and 25 percent of what recipient countries pay Cuba for the medical services. As a result, the personnel involved “would not have remuneration that allows them to subsist with dignity” nor “cover basic living costs,” the Commission states.

The Cuban foreign minister insisted that his country’s medical brigades “carry out solidarity work in places of difficult access, help develop health systems with experienced human resources, and their personnel are contracted voluntarily, legally and sovereignly” under international norms.

Amid rising tensions between Cuba and the United States, the two countries maintain a dialogue that remains in a “very preliminary” stage, Cuban Deputy Foreign Minister Josefina Vidal said on Monday. Vidal played a key role in the restoration of bilateral relations in 2015.

Trending Now

Tropical Wave Brings Rain and 95 km/h Wind Gusts to Costa Rica

Tropical Wave No. 19 is crossing Costa Rica today, increasing the chance of rain, thunderstorms and strong wind gusts across much of the country,...

Costa Rica Sends a Second Rescue Team to Earthquake-Stricken Venezuela

Costa Rica increased its response to Venezuela's earthquake disaster yesterday, dispatching a second contingent of 48 search-and-rescue specialists to a country where the death...

Costa Rica’s Route 27 Contractor Faces Nearly $100 Million in Possible Fines

The Route 27 sinkhole that has disrupted traffic for more than a month is now part of a broader accountability fight over one of...

Costa Rica Approves Limón Marina Plan in Major Caribbean Tourism Push

Costa Rica’s Legislative Assembly gave final approval Thursday to a reform that clears the way for JAPDEVA to seek strategic partners for major infrastructure...

Poachers Threaten One of Costa Rica’s Best-Known Wildlife Refuges

One of the Nicoya Peninsula’s best-known wildlife destinations is facing renewed pressure from illegal hunters, after camera traps placed inside or near Refugio Nacional...

Costa Rican Soccer Hit by Match-Fixing Scandal

Costa Rican soccer is facing one of its most serious integrity cases in recent years after three players were suspended for 15 years over...

Costa Rica Starts Bridge Renovation on Busy Route

Drivers and pedestrians using one of San José’s busiest road corridors face temporary changes Tuesday as renovation work begins on a pedestrian bridge over...

Latin American Players Bring New Grass-Court Momentum Into Wimbledon

Francisco Cerúndolo has given Latin American tennis its clearest grass-court statement of the summer, turning a historic Queen’s Club title into a broader Wimbledon...

Costa Rica Sinkhole Still Unfixed After One Month

One month after a major sinkhole opened on Route 27 at kilometer 56 near Orotina, Costa Rica still has no definitive date for a...
🌴 The Weekly Pura Vida

Costa Rica, Once a Week

The week's top stories, weather & insider tips — delivered every Sunday. One email, zero clutter.

🔒 Free. No spam. Unsubscribe anytime.

Loading…

Latest News from Costa Rica

Costa Rica Coffee Maker Chorreador
Costa Rica Car Rentals
Costa Rica Travel Insurance
Costa Rica Travel