Updated
Updated · The New York Times · May 11
House Foreign Affairs Committee members examine humanitarian impact of US energy blockade in Cuba
Updated
Updated · The New York Times · May 11

House Foreign Affairs Committee members examine humanitarian impact of US energy blockade in Cuba

4 articles · Updated · The New York Times · May 11
  • After a five-day April visit, lawmakers cited Havana hospital blackouts, broken incubators and fuel shortages, saying one Russian tanker provided only 10 to 14 days of oil.
  • They said sanctions and blocked fuel deliveries have crippled healthcare, transport, water and agriculture, with doctors manually pumping ventilators during outages and pregnant women climbing stairs because lifts failed.
  • The lawmakers argued the policy violates international norms and amounts to collective punishment; they said Cubans across political divides opposed the blockade and any US invasion.
As Cuba's infant mortality soars, is the U.S. blockade creating a humanitarian failure with regional consequences?
How does the U.S. naval enforcement of sanctions against Cuba reshape the future of global trade and international law?