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US urges its citizens in Cuba to brace for protests, outages, fuel shortage

Trump has also threatened tariffs on goods from countries supplying oil to Cuba

A driver fills up his tank at a gas station. PHOTO: REUTERS


WASHINGTON:

The US embassy in Cuba warned Americans in the country on Tuesday that there was a spike in government-sponsored protests against Washington and that some US citizens were denied entry upon arrival.

It also said American citizens in Cuba should prepare for “significant disruption” from power outages and fuel shortages.

Why it’s important

In recent weeks, Washington has moved to block all oil from reaching Cuba, including that from ally Venezuela, pushing up prices for food and transportation and prompting severe fuel shortages and hours of blackouts.

Key quotes

“Take precautions by conserving fuel, water, food and mobile phone charge, and be prepared for significant disruption,” the US embassy noted on its website, saying Cuba’s national electrical grid is increasingly unstable and prolonged power outages are a daily occurrence.

Read: Trump says India will buy Venezuelan oil instead of Iran

“US citizens in Cuba or planning to travel to Cuba are advised that there have been incidents of US citizens being denied entry upon arrival as well as a spike in regime-sponsored protest activity directed at the United States, including anti-US rhetoric”.

Context

Emboldened by the US military’s seizure of ousted Venezuelan leader Nicolas Maduro in a deadly raid last month that President Donald Trump ordered, the Republican leader has talked of acting against Cuba and pressuring its leadership.

The UN human rights office has said the US raid in which Maduro was seized was a violation of international law and human rights experts cast Trump’s focus on exploiting Venezuelan oil as echoing an imperialist approach.

Read more: Trump says Iran wants deal, US ‘armada’ larger than in Venezuela raid

Trump has said, “Cuba will be failing pretty soon,” adding that Venezuela, once the island’s top supplier, has not recently sent oil or money to Cuba. Trump has also threatened tariffs on goods from countries supplying oil to Cuba.

Cuba’s deputy foreign minister told Reuters on Monday that Cuba and the US are in communication, although he noted the exchanges have not evolved into a formal “dialogue”.

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