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United StatesCulture5 days ago

US slaps sanctions against Cuban oil and gas company as tensions rise

The U.S. government has imposed sanctions on Cuba's state-owned oil and gas company, Cupet, citing claims that the company unlawfully expropriated assets from American owners and is misusing energy resources. U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio stated that Cuba's leadership is diverting energy supplies for military and repressive purposes while causing fuel shortages for civilians. The Cuban government has previously criticized such sanctions as economically harmful to its population.

World

/

June 16, 2026

The UN confronts a “perfect storm” of US-sponsored deprivation on the island.

A man searches through trash in the dark in Havana, Cuba, on June 11, 2026, as widespread shortages affect daily life. (Magdalena Chodownik / Anadolu via Getty Images)

On June 8, United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights Volker Türk issued a dramatic declaration, holding the Trump administration directly accountable for the escalating humanitarian crisis in Cuba. The crippling impact of the US oil blockade, and new sanctions driving foreign companies from the island, are creating what Türk called “a perfect storm for social and economic deterioration and suffering for the Cuban people.”

“Such severe sanctions packages that target entire sectors of an economy and produce broad, indiscriminate, and harsh effects on populations are incompatible with basic principles of international human rights law,” according to the UN human rights chief. “Children are dying because doctors lack access to essential medical supplies and medicines,” he stated. “This is unacceptable.”

Commissioner Türk’s denunciation of Washington’s “maximum pressure” policy has generated headlines throughout the world: “UN Rights Chief Urges US to Lift Cuba Sanctions”; “US Sanctions Against Cuba Are Endangering Lives and Must Be Lifted Immediately”; and “Children Are Dying: UN Human Rights Chief Demands Trump End Economic Assault on Cuba.” But behind the declarations, the UN is also attempting to rally the world community to assist Cuba as Trump’s punitive policies push that island nation toward the brink of socioeconomic collapse.

Toward that goal, the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) has taken the lead. On June 4, Ghana’s Edem Wosornu, who serves as OCHA’s director of the Crisis Response Division, convened member states for a status report on the Cuba crisis. She shared observations from a recent fact-finding mission she had taken to the island, coordinated with officials from the World Health Organization and the Pan American Health Organization. “The word used in Cuba was ‘slowburn,’” she reported, “just having a slowness of a crisis that is compounding. And you could see it firsthand.”

Indeed, a series of PowerPoint slides presented during the meeting reflect what Wosornu called the “far-reaching consequences” of Cuba’s dire energy crisis—the scarcity of fuel and electricity since the Trump administration imposed an oil blockade last January. Statistics listed in “Humanitarian Impacts—Deteriorating Across Sectors” capture the grim situation currently faced by the Cuban people:

Health: Over 100,000 surgeries are delayed, including 12,000 pediatric procedures. Survival rates for children with cancer have fallen from 85 percent to 65 percent. Only 30 percent of essential medicines are available.

Current Issue

WASH: 2.7 million people affected by water shortages. The national water system is functioning with only 37 percent of its fuel needs. Eighty-four percent of water pumping runs on electricity.

Food: Food prices increased by 18 percent. Energy shortages are disrupting agricultural production, processing, refrigeration, and distribution. Food losses are rising, availability is shrinking.

Mental health and social fabric: Prolonged deprivation—no light, no water, no food security—is generating psychological distress and exhaustion, especially among children, the elderly, and caregivers.

And the suffering is likely to get far worse. There are “compounding risks ahead,” the presentation warned. Summer has begun and “rising temperatures are creating conditions for a surge in vector-borne and waterborne diseases—in a health system already stretched to its limits.”

OCHA has developed a $94 million action plan to “address critical humanitarian needs and sustain essential services for prioritized vulnerable populations” on the island. The UN mission is to provide emergency assistance to approximately 2 million Cubans in over 60 municipalities across the country, targeting the health, shelter, food, and education sectors for lifesaving support. Over the last several months, UN officials estimate that they have reached some 1 million Cubans with food and medical assistance.

But the UN plan faces severe “implementation challenges.” Major obstacles to financing, transporting, and distributing emergency assistance, according to the UN, derive from the Trump administration’s Machiavellian effort to cut off Cuba’s oil supplies and dissuade other countries from aiding the Cuban people. “External measures affecting Cuba, including unilateral [US] sanctions and other restrictions, have reduced the supply of oil and its derivatives. This disruption has triggered a severe energy shock, characterized by a critical fuel shortage affecting electricity generation, transportation, and essential logistics across the country,” states a summary of the Plan of Action. “Furthermore, fuel shortages are limiting the opera…

Read the full article at The Nation
Source document: United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights Volker Türk

3 reports

The NationIndependentLeft5 days ago
Cuba’s Humanitarian Crisis: The United Nations’ Response

The article discusses the United Nations' response to the humanitarian crisis in Cuba, attributing it to U.S. sanctions and the oil blockade. UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Volker Türk criticizes these policies, stating they have led to severe economic and social deterioration in Cuba, including shortages of medical supplies affecting children's lives.

Bias read (Left): The article frames the U.S. sanctions as the primary cause of the humanitarian crisis in Cuba, using strong language such as 'U.S.-sponsored deprivation,' 'crippling impact,' and 'severe sanctions packages.' It quotes the UN human rights chief condemning U.S. policy and highlights the negative human

Official sources cited

  • government United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights Volker Türk
ABC News (US)IndependentRight9 days ago
US slaps sanctions against Cuban oil and gas company as tensions rise

The U.S. government has imposed sanctions on Cuba's state-owned oil and gas company, Cupet, citing claims that the company unlawfully expropriated assets from American owners and is misusing energy resources. U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio stated that Cuba's leadership is diverting energy supplies for military and repressive purposes while causing fuel shortages for civilians. The Cuban government has previously criticized such sanctions as economically harmful to its population.

Bias read (Right): The article frames the sanctions as a response to alleged actions by Cuban authorities, using strong language like 'weaponizing energy' and 'hoarding energy supplies for its military, intelligence and repressive forces.' These phrases imply criticism of Cuba's governance and suggest a narrative of U

Official sources cited

  • government U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio's Statement
UN NewsState / PublicLeft13 days ago
Children are dying as US sanctions push Cuba to the brink, warns UN human rights chief

The UN human rights chief, Volker Türk, warned that children are dying in Cuba due to the impact of U.S. sanctions, which have caused severe shortages of essential medicines and disrupted critical services such as electricity and healthcare. The sanctions, including fuel restrictions and extraterritorial measures targeting traders and financial institutions, have led to widespread harm, particularly affecting the most vulnerable populations.

Bias read (Left): The article presents the U.S. sanctions as the primary cause of humanitarian crises in Cuba, using strong language like 'children are dying' and 'unacceptable.' It attributes blame to the U.S. without counterbalancing perspectives and emphasizes the negative consequences of the sanctions, aligning a

Official sources cited

Go to the primary sources (3)

The official sources this coverage is built on. Read them directly to bypass framing.

  • governmentUnited Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights Volker Türk
  • governmentU.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio's Statement
  • governmentOHCHR report