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UN experts warn US fuel blockade in Cuba puts human rights at risk

By Thomson Reuters May 7, 2026 | 4:32 PM

May 7 (Reuters) – U.S. President Donald Trump’s executive order in January to impose a fuel blockade on Cuba amounts to “energy starvation” ​with grave consequences for the Caribbean ‌island nation’s development and human rights, U.N. experts said on Thursday.

Washington, which has imposed an embargo on the communist-run island since 1960, intensified measures this year by ‌threatening ​tariffs on countries supplying it ⁠with oil and repeatedly ⁠suggesting it could take military action against Cuba.

Only Russia has continued to send shipments to Cuba, whose power grid is heavily reliant ​on imported fuel. The blockade has forced the government to further ration key services, while ⁠some business and homes ⁠have turned to alternatives such as ​solar power.

“This measure has sharply worsened fuel shortages across ​the island, pushing essential services to the ‌brink,” said a group of independent experts appointed by the U.N. Human Rights Council in a statement.

“While the order references human rights concerns ⁠within Cuba, it fails to consider how the measure itself — a unilateral coercive measure — directly harms the enjoyment ⁠of human ‌rights of the Cuban people.”

Separately on ⁠Thursday, the U.S. imposed financial sanctions ​on ‌a sprawling business conglomerate run by ​Cuba’s military ⁠and a Cuban-Canadian mining joint venture.

Last week, Trump signed another executive order broadening U.S. sanctions against people, entities and affiliates that support the Cuban government’s security apparatus.

(Reporting by Sarah Morland; Editing by ​Cynthia Osterman)