Another Cuban Blackout

On January 28, “a breakdown in unit 5 of the Diez de Octubre Thermoelectric Plant in Nuevitas” caused a blackout affecting around half of Cuba.  In addition, unit 2 in Felton has been out of service since 2022 and generation units at the Santa Cruz del Norte, Cienfuegos and Renté thermoelectric plants are undergoing maintenance. Furthermore, the fuel shortage prevents generating 348 MW with generator sets.[1]

Unrelated, “the Cuban government collected more than five million pesos in Matanzas by last week, through more than 2,000 fines, as a result of more than 13,000 control actions. . . . Of the total of 262 fines imposed by the Provincial Inspection Directorate, with an amount of more than one million pesos, 148 of them respond to non-compliance with pricing policies, with fines amounting to more than 800,000 pesos.”[2]

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[1]  The Nuevitas Thermoelectric Plant breaks down and half of Cuba is in blackout, Diario de Cuba (Jan. 28, 2025). https://diariodecuba.com/cuba/1738096729_59642.html

[2]  The crusade against the private sector continues: the Government collects more than five million pesos in fines in Matanzas, Diario de Cuba (Jan. 23, 2025).

Cuba’s Crisis Is Result of Cuban Socialism

Rafaela Cruz, a Cuban journalist and economist, asserts that Cuba’s current economic crisis is a result of its socialist system that concentrates  “political power in an elite, keeping the civilian population atomized and economically dependent on the State.”

“We are living through the result of six decades of a system – socialism, statism – that has caused more havoc wherever it has been implemented than the hordes of Attila the Hun. There is not a single historical example of a successful socialist economy in relation to its capitalist counterparts.”

“The people must be deprived of any hope for real, sustainable and growing improvement within socialism, by demonstrating to them in historical and economic terms that, as a parasitic system, it will always take more than it can give; but we must also eliminate all desire —through ignorance or short-termism— for improvement within this system, and stop rejoicing when the economic situation improves slightly —out of humanity, they say— when the only way out of this eternal crisis is to reach a situation so bad that the parasite’s own survival is impossible. And yes, for that we must suffer. Has any people ever achieved freedom and prosperity without paying a toll in suffering?

“The path to [Cuban] prosperity, to the dignity that only being free can bring, does not lie in improving socialism, but in killing it; and to do that we will probably have to suffer more hunger, more blackouts, more of all those deprivations that we have been suffering for decades — sometimes more, sometimes less — and that we will only completely overcome when socialism disappears . We have to reach our darkest moment if we ever want to see the light.”

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Cruz, Crisis and socialism in Cuba: the road to the end, Diario de Cuba (Jan. 22, 2025) Here are references to other blog posts about Cruz. .  And here is a list of articles by Cruz in Diario de Cuba.

 

 

President Trump Revokes Biden’s Cancellation of  Cuba as State Sponsor of Terrorism         

The U.S. position on whether Cuba is a state sponsor of terrorism recently has gone through several significant changes.

On December 24, 2024, the U.S. State Department  released its latest annual report on countries that were state sponsors of terrorism, and it again included Cuba.[1]

On January 14,  2025, President Biden announced that his administration intended to remove Cuba from that list.[2]

On January 20, just after being sworn in as U.S. President, Donald Trump signed an executive order cancelling various President Biden’s actions, including his Presidential Memorandum of January 14, 2025( (Certification of rescission of Cuba’s Designation as a State Sponsor of Terrorism.[3]

Miguel Diaz-Canel, the Cuban President, said this Trump action was “an act of arrogance and disregard for the truth. It is not surprising. Their goal is to continue strengthening the cruel economic war against Cuba for the purpose of domination, The result of the extreme economic blockade measures imposed by Trump has been to cause shortages among our people, and a significant increase in the migratory flow from Cuba to the United States. This act of mockery and abuse confirms the discredit of the lists and unilateral mechanisms of coercion of the US Government. The legitimate and noble cause of our people will prevail, and once again it will win,. [4]

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[1] U.S. Announces that Cuba Is Still a State Sponsor of Terrorism , dwkcommentaries.com  (Dec. 13, 2024).

[2] E.g.,, Biden moves to lift state sponsor of terrorism designation for Cuba, part of deal to free prisoners,  AP News (Jan. 14, 2025).

[3] White House, Executive Order: Initial Rescissions of Harmful Executive Orders and Actions (Jan. 20, 2025) .

[4] Donald Trump revokes Cuba’s exclusion form the list of state sponsors of terrorism, Diario de Cuba (Jan. 21, 2025); Donald Trump reversed the removal of Cuba from the list of state sponsors of terrorism, Granma (Jan. 21, 2025).

 

Washington Post Calls for Closing  Guantanamo Bay Prison 

In the following  January 15 Editorial, the Washington Post called flor closing the U. S. prison in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.[1]

“President Joe Biden is set to leave office Monday as the third president to try — and fail — to close the U.S. military prison at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba. This ugly symbol of one of the most regrettable policies in recent American history will persist into another administration, and very likely beyond.”

“President George W. Bush opened Guantánamo at the height of the “war on terror” and quickly filled it with 780 men. After belatedly realizing that its existence had become a terrorist recruiting tool and a blight on America’s global standing as a beacon of justice, Bush wanted to close it but settled for reducing the population to 242 inmates. Barack Obama campaigned on a promise to close the prison, but once elected he was stymied by Congress, managing only to reduce its population to 40. President Donald Trump, in his first term, pledged to keep the prison running and fill it with “some bad dudes,” but added no prisoners.”

“Biden deserves credit for bringing Guantánamo’s inmate population down to 15. This month, in the largest-ever transfer of detainees, 11 Yemeni men were sent to Oman. This followed the movement in December of two detainees to Malaysia and one to Kenya.”

“The remaining prisoners are from Afghanistan, Iraq, Libya, Pakistan, Yemen, Somalia, Indonesia and Saudi Arabia. There is also one Palestinian and one stateless Rohingya Muslim who was captured by Pakistani troops near the Afghanistan border in 2001.”

“The inmate population might have been reduced further in August, had Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin not stepped in at the last moment to nix a plea deal with three men accused of plotting the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks. Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, Walid bin Attash and Mustafa al-Hawsawi had agreed to plead guilty before a military commission hearing their cases in exchange for the government taking the death penalty off the table. The men would have served life in prison instead. Austin’s decision to revoke the plea deal was inexplicable — he would have, or should have, known about it long before it became public — and can only be marked down to the political calendar; the presidential election was three months away, and the families of the 9/11 victims might have been outraged by a deal that spared the lives of some of the terror plot’s masterminds. Austin’s decision was overturned by a military judge, and the deal is now stalled.”

“Biden also could have moved more quickly early in his term if he had made emptying Guantánamo a higher priority — as might have been expected from a president who said “democracy promotion” was a core tenet of his foreign policy. Keeping inmates detained for decades in a parallel legal structure, without charges, after many were subjected to torture and denied basic due process (the presumption of innocence and speedy trials, for instance) contradicts core principles of American justice. For 23 years, Guantánamo’s dark stain has hampered America’s ability to honestly condemn other countries for using arbitrary detention and torture, and for denying basic human rights for the accused.”

“Opening Guantánamo was a mistake from the start, and presidents since Bush can be blamed for not correcting it. But Congress has thrown up obstacles. Biden and Obama were both hamstrung by foolish legislation that tightly restricted detainee transfers to other countries and altogether prohibited sending them to prisons on U.S. soil because of specious concerns about security. Federal prisons already hold convicted terrorists, including shoe bomber Richard Reid and Zacarias Moussaoui, sometimes called the 20th hijacker.”

“Leaving only 15 detainees in Guantánamo Bay at an estimated cost of about $500 million a year — $33 million per prisoner — exposes the absurdity of keeping the prison open at all.”

“Abuse of detainees during wars or periods of mass trauma is tragically common. Think of the forced relocation and imprisonment of people of Japanese ancestry during World War II. But it is left to future leaders to acknowledge and correct such wrongs. President-elect Trump, who signed an executive order in 2018 to keep Guantánamo open, has expressed no interest in closing it. But in 2019 he did acknowledge that the cost of maintaining the prison was “crazy.” If he is now serious about wanting to improve government efficiency, he should work toward transferring the remaining inmates to secure federal prisons.”

Conclusion. Give thanks to the Washington Post for this Editorial.

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[1] Editorial, After 23 shameful years, close Guantanamo, Wash. Post (Jan. 15, 2025).

 

More Litigation About the George Floyd Killing

On May 25, 2020, in south Minneapolis, George Floyd, a black man, died while lying on the street under the pressure on his back and neck by Minneapolis policeman Derek Chauvin with the assistance of three other Minneapolis policemen (Thomas Lane, J. Alexander Kueng  and Tou Thao). In subsequent state and federal criminal prosecutions, all four of these policemen were convicted and sent to federal prison for concurrent service of their state and federal sentences.[1]

Recently Chauvin’s filed a motion for a new trial in his federal court case that awaits court disposition.

In addition, Katy Blackwell, another Minneapolis police officer who testiied about the training of Derek Chauvin and the other criminal defendants, has brought a civil lawsuit for defamation against the author of a book about her testimony and a movie based on that book. That lawsuit also is sill pending.

Detaiils about these other proceedings will be provided in subsequent posts.

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[1] This blog has published many ports about the George Floyd killing and the resulting criminal prosecutions. (See List of Posts to dwkcommentaries: Topical: George Floyd Killing,.)

Two Former MPD Officers Have Completed Their Criminal Imprisonment for Involvement in George Floyd Killing  

Two of the four Minneapolis Police Department officers who were convicted for involvement in the 2020 murder of George Floyd have completed their criminal imprisonment for same.[1]

On January 15, 2026, J. Alexander Kueng was released from a low-security federal prison in Lisbon, Ohio after completing his sentence and now is going on supervised release until March 2026.

Thomas Lane was released from prison last August  followed by another year of supervised release.

Tou Thao remains in prison, but is scheduled to be released this November.

The leader of this group of MPD officers, Derek Chauvin, remains in prison while he is seeking a new trial, which will be discussed in a future post.

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[1] Walsh & Norfleet, One of ex-police officers convicted for George Floyd’s murder is released from prison, StarTribune (Jan.15, 2025).;Ex-Minneapolis officer thomas Lane, convicted in George Floyd’s killing, is released from prison, StarTribune (Aug. 20, 2024).

Former Cuban Judge: Cuba Uses Criminal and Administrative Law To Violate Citizens Rights        

Former Cuban Judge, Edel Gonzalez Jimenez, says that Cuba’s second highest prison rate in the world is typical of a system of law in which the sanctioning element prevails over compliance with citizens’ rights and the duties of the State.”

“When a State lacks material and financial resources, and its own policies for social inclusion, it generally resorts to the use of brute force. The use of brute force in a State is not well regarded by the international community or by its own citizens.”

“That is why we have seen that since 2019 (in Cuba) norms have been issued that regulate violations in practically all scenarios of human conduct: in the workplace, in the exercise of self-employment, in public spaces.”

In Cuba there is a “proliferation of informal garbage dumps and the lack of containers, despite the fact that citizens are required not to dump waste on public roads. Furthermore, in a country where the population needs foreign currency to travel outside the country and even to cover basic needs, the State penalizes the purchase and sale of foreign currency between individuals, despite the fact that it is not capable of selling these currencies to citizens.”

The Government’s need for foreign currency and money has led to the arrest of people who have some foreign currency to “ provisional imprisonment, the confiscation of all the money that is seized and exemplary prison sentences.”

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The Cuban regime uses ‘criminal and administrative law’ to exercise violence against its citizens, Diario de Cuba (Jan. 10, 2024).

Cuba’s Elite Posses More of the Island’s Wealth

According to a recent report in the Miami Herald and Diario de Cuba, “hundreds of millions of dollars earned by companies on the island that should go to public services end up in the accounts of GAESA or its subsidiaries.” On paper the Cuban military owns GAESA, but “the Castro family and its allies are widely believed to be the company’s beneficiaries.”

“[O]ne of GAESA’s companies, Gaviota, which is in the hotel business, “is sitting on about $4.3 billion in its bank accounts,” according the documents. In other words, the “Cuban military has more than enough money on hand to cover both dire needs” [of maintaining the country’s electrical grid and providing medical supplies for its hospitals]. Instead it has “diverted the country’s badly needed hard currency to its enterprises.”

Another source of GAESA’s current wealth is the 2016 gift of Cuba’s Banco Financiero International to GAESA that has allowed the latter by 2022 to pursue “a silent strategy to take over the country’s wealth.’”

Another source of money for GAESA is expropriation of  large sums of money paid by foreign governments for the services of Cuban medical personnel on missions to those countries.

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O’Grady, A Crack Appears in Cuba’s Dictatorship, W.S. J. (Jan. 5, 2025).

 

 

Cuban Catholic Priests: Island’s Greatest Evil Is Social Fracture Caused by Repression and Fear 

Christmas homilies by several Roman Catholic priests in Cuba criticized the defenselessness to which the regime has condemned Cubans.

Father Rodríguez Alegre, a priest of the Archdiocese of Santiago de Cuba, said: ”‘I cry for Cuba because Cuba hurts me. The pain of my brothers hurts me.’ He stressed that Cuba’s greatest evil is not material deprivation, but the loss of truth and the social fracture caused by repression and fear. ‘We have lived in lies and now we do not know how to find the path to truth.’”

Father Jesús Fernando Marcoleta, parish priest in Varadero, “emphasized the transformative character of Christmas as a beacon of light in the midst of darkness: ‘Now that we are suffocated by living without light, the Christmas of Jesus becomes more propitious as it is more night in each one of us and more night in the nation. Every human being has the right to hope, to good hope.’”

“Both priests . . . agreed that the path to the reconstruction of Cuba passes through reconciliation and a return to the values ​​of the Gospel.”  Alegre quoted Jose Marti, “”We must discard the barbaric gospel of hatred in order to speak the sweet talk of love.” Marcoleta said, “Guide, Lord, our steps to the light of your grace. You who always exceed our expectations and are stronger than our fears, allow us to believe in your word.”

Earlier another priest, Father Alberto Reyes “pleaded with Cuba’s rulers to take whatever they want and leave the country forever as the only way to stop ‘everyday being a continuous struggle for survival. You are not going to refloat this country, you are not going to remedy the lack of fuel, nor the precariousness of the thermoelectric plants, nor are you going to give us back a life without continuous blackouts. You are not going to solve the hunger of this people, nor are you going to make the days stop being a continuous struggle for survival. You are not going to solve the monetary problem, nor inflation, nor the miserable life of the people.’”

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Cuba’s greatest evil is the social fracture caused by repression and fear, say Catholic priests on the island, Diario de Cuba (Dec. 28, 2024).

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Amnesty International Condemns Cuba’s Suppression of Dissent

On December 26, Amnesty International denounced four Cuban tactics to suppress dissent.

One tactic was short-term detention as a “tool of control and intimidation. [P]lacing a person under arrest for a few hours or days ‘sends a message of terror to those who dissent.’”

Another tactic was cutting internet service as a way “to silence protests.”

The third tactic was “the criminalization of opponents who express themselves freely. ‘They are criminally prosecuted if they do not give up their fight for respect for human rights.’”

The fourth tactic was firing from their jobs those who raise their voices against the regime.

In conclusion AI “urged people to fight for a ‘#CubaWithoutRepression,’ share its message and demand that Miguel Díaz-Canel ‘stop the repression now.’”

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Amnesty International condemns four regime tactics to suppress dissent, Diario de Cuba (Dec. 27, 2024).