HAVANA COURT SENTENCES 13 CUBANS TO TWO YEARS IN PRISON

HAVANA, June 4th Official media reported this Friday that a court in Havana has sentenced 13 people to up to two years in prison for reselling fuel amid a severe crisis that has affected Cuba for the past two months.

According to a statement by the People’s Provincial Court of Havana cited by the official website cubadebate, two will serve their sentence with corrective work, while 11 more will go to jail. The minor jail sentence is one year and four months.

In all, 15 people were tried—two of whom were acquitted—for the crime of betting. The sentence is not final, so it can still be appealed.

Those sanctioned – according to the court – sold the fuel on the island-wide black market at prices ranging from 350 to 600 pesos per liter ($14.5 to $25 per liter according to the official exchange rate). Means 20 times more than the price at service stations.

The island has been going through a fuel shortage since early April resulting in long lines at gas stations which often do not have fuel.

This situation has led many Cubans to resell the liters they receive at exorbitant prices as a quick way to obtain cash. The country is also going through a deep economic crisis which has worsened since the start of the pandemic in 2020.

According to the court, the sanctioned 11 were increased “within the sanctioning framework”, taking into account that the offenses were committed “in a complex scenario, exacerbated by the fuel shortage.”

The Cuban government reported in late April that fuel shortages would continue until at least May due to “non-compliance by the supplying countries”.

NEWS FROM HAVANA

HAVANA, May 16   Cuba announced on Tuesday measures that ease restrictions on its citizens living abroad as the communist-run nation continues to grapple with an unprecedented exodus of migrants to the United States.

The foreign ministry said passports would be valid for 10 years, instead of six, for Cubans over 16 years of age, and cut by more than half the costs associated with renewing the travel documents off-island.

The ministry also eliminated a requirement that Cubans pay a fee every two years, even before their passports expired, to maintain their active status.

The new rules take effect on July 1, said Ernesto Soberon, director of Consular Affairs for the Cuban Foreign Ministry. He said the measures are focused on “the strengthening of ties with the Cuban community abroad.”

Cuba for decades limited the emigration of its citizens, and many Cubans living abroad complain of bureaucratic hurdles and exorbitant fees for maintaining ties and renewing travel documents with their home country.

More than 300,000 Cubans arrived at the U.S. border last year, according to U.S. Customs and Border Patrol data, a record-breaking exodus amid an unprecedented economic crisis.

The migration of the island has further stressed the country’s already near-collapsed economy and weighs heavily on Cuban society, with many families broken and scattered across the globe.