Cuba slowly getting power back
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The Trump administration’s military strike in January against Cuba’s former ally Venezuela cut off a crucial supply of oil to the island. It was soon followed by a US-ordered oil blockade on the island,
"Thirty-four hours straight without electricity or water. My little girls are sleeping on the floor yet again."
Cuba is heading toward an irreversible demographic contraction and could end the century with just 5.6 million residents, a U.N. report says.
The most important things Raúl Guillermo Rodríguez Castro said about dealing with Trump and the United States in an exclusive USA TODAY interview.
Cuban President Miguel Díaz-Canel said Cuba is ready to resist any U.S. military intervention. He warned that Cubans are “not afraid” and would defend “to the very last drop of blood” in response to
China has always opposed illegal unilateral sanctions that have no basis in international law, and urges the US to immediately stop its blockade of Cuba and coercive pressure on the country, and to stop violating the Cuban people's rights to survival and development,
When people in Cuba describe the state of their healthcare system they don’t use phrases like “on the brink” or “serious shortages.” Health care on the island, which was already noticeably deteriorating before the current energy crisis,
Mike Gonzalez, who fled communist Cuba, warns a vicious cycle of socialist candidates winning could put communists in double digits in Congress.
