The Real Cuba News and Commentary

Cuba calls Trump plan for mass deportation of immigrants unrealistic

HAVANA - A proposal by U.S. President-elect Donald Trump for mass deportation of immigrants living illegally in the United States that may include Cubans is unrealistic and unfair, Cuba's deputy foreign minister said on Wednesday.



Cuba's Comunist Government Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs Carlos Fernandez de Cossio

Trump has pledged a vast immigration crackdown, aiming to deport record numbers of immigrants, an operation that his running mate JD Vance estimated could remove 1 million people a year.

Wednesday's comments by Carlos Fernandez de Cossio followed routine migration talks in Havana with counterparts from the administration of U.S. President Joe Biden.

Any such deportation proposal must be vetted within the bounds of existing migration agreements between the United States and Cuba, he told reporters.

"In that context, it's not realistic to think that there could be mass deportations from the United States to Cuba," de Cossio said.

Under existing accords, Cuba has accepted small numbers of deportations from the U.S. by air and by sea during the Biden administration.

Trump's incoming border czar Tom Homan has said deportations would focus on criminals and those given final deportation orders, but has not committed to exemptions for specific groups or nationalities.

The Trump deportation proposal was not discussed with Biden officials during Wednesday's two-way migration talks, de Cossio said.

A U.S. delegation had met Cuban officials in Havana to review the U.S.-Cuba Migration Accords, which date back to 1984, Brian Nichols, the top U.S. diplomat for Latin America, said on X.

"(The delegation) highlighted our success curbing irregular Cuban maritime and land-based migration," Nichols said.

It was unclear whether Trump would abide by existing accords with Cuba or seek to renegotiate them, as he has in other circumstances.

For decades, Cuba has blamed the U.S. Cold War-era trade embargo for decimating its economy and encouraging the mass migration of Cubans to the United States.

But a large-scale deportation to send them back home would be drastic and unfair, de Cossio said.

"Trying to deport tens of thousands or hundreds of thousands of Cubans to Cuba ... would be uprooting people who have already made their lives in the United States," he added.

Trump struggled to ramp up deportations during his first term, from 2017 to 2021.

When counting both immigration removals and faster “returns” to Mexico by U.S. border officials, Biden deported more immigrants in fiscal 2023 than in any Trump year, government data shows.

Immigrant advocates warn that a broader Trump deportation effort would be costly, divisive and inhumane, leading to family separations and devastating communities.

Cuba hit by magnitude 5.9 earthquake, no immediate reports of damage

Dec 23 - An earthquake of magnitude 5.9 struck 55 km southeast of Bayamo, Cuba on Monday, the European-Mediterranean Seismological Centre (EMSC) said.


Local authorities said that as of early Monday morning no serious damage had occurred and there were no deaths or injuries.

The quake was at a depth of 25 km (15.53 miles), EMSC said.

The Cuban National Seismological service reported the quake as a 6.1 magnitude event just off the coast of eastern Santiago de Cuba, with more than 100 aftershocks as dawn broke.

A 6.9 magnitude earthquake struck off the coast of neighboring Granma province in November causing some structural damage but no fatalities.

Most seismic activity in Cuba takes place in the region around Santiago. A fault line runs along the island's southeastern coast, marking the boundary between the North American plate and the Caribbean plate, according to Cuba's seismic service.

The Cuban capital of Havana was not affected by the quake.

Tourism amid power cuts and food shortages: Why does Cuba continue to invest in hotels?

Despite the fact that fewer and fewer visitors are traveling to the island and hotel occupancy has fallen, the government allocated almost 40% of its investments in 2024 to activities related to the industry


Tourists drive through Havana in a classic American car, in an archive photograph..

The bartender recalls the day when, while working in his cantina facing the Caribbean Sea, a German tourist ordered a fish fillet.

— “I don’t have any, sir. What I have is pork, beef, and chicken,” said the bartender, who won’t give his name because he’s not willing to lose his 25-year job at a hotel in Cayo Largo del Sur.

— “But you have all that sea and no fish?” the tourist replied.

On other occasions, the bartender has had to come up with a way to satisfy a customer. There was the case of a tourist who asked for a Cuba Libre, one of the most famous Cuban cocktails, made with white rum, Coca Cola, and lemon. If any of the above ingredients are missing, the bartender does not hold back: “I told him: ‘Look, I can’t make you a Cuba Libre, but I can make you something else.’ If I have lemon soda, I say that I am going to make an aphrodisiac drink that in my city is called Santo Libre. That is a lie, it is lemon soda with aged rum. But the customer accepts and I tell them: ‘Tomorrow, you tell me.’ Sometimes you solve the situation, but sometimes you can’t. Canadians are great beer drinkers and, if there is no beer, there is nothing to invent,” he says.

His hotel, a facility operated by the Gran Caribe group and the Blue Diamond company, is located in the Canarreos archipelago, a paradise in the southwest of Cuba. For him, there have been no better years than those between 2012 and 2015, when tourists arrived en masse at the hotel, on planes that left from Italy, Canada, or Germany and landed directly on the Cayo. Or American tourists, who reached a record number of 173,550 in 2014, the same year that former U.S. president Barack Obama announced the normalization of diplomatic relations with Havana.


People use their cell phones in the doorway of a Havana hotel during a power outage, in October 2024.

“Right now, those direct flights don’t exist. Tourists come from Havana, Varadero, or other places in Cuba,” says the worker, who regrets not having ever seen the no vacancies sign at the hotel again, as it was in its golden days, when the 600 rooms that the facility has were occupied.
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Official: in Cuba the private sector's mission should not be to make money, but to 'support the Revolution'

Although he acknowledges that 'the offensive' against the sector has not yielded the expected results, Díaz-Canel stressed what has been achieved at the cost of Cubans' further impoverishment.


If at this point anyone harbored any doubts that the Cuban regime has only allowed the limited existence of a private sector on the island insofar as it serves its primary objective, to remain in power, Miguel Díaz-Canel dispelled them this Friday, criticizing that this sector seeks to enrich itself rather than "support the Revolution" in remarks at the Communist Party of Cuba (PCC) Central Committee's 9th Plenary Session.

"As long as there is confusion about the relationships that must exist between the State and the non-State sectors, and the role of each in the economy, we are going to stumble, with misunderstandings, deformations, and corruption, illegality, and not in a constructive environment," said the president, according to the regime's Cubadebate portal.

According to the Cuban leader, it is necessary to ensure that "at the territorial, municipal and national levels, that sector must be aligned with the Economic Plan, so that it is really participating in our economic and social development strategies, from the locality to the nation, as otherwise everything will be nothing but empty discourse."

"Today they produce goods, provide services, and engage in exporting and importing, but if they do so however they like, without conforming to the plans, without paying taxes to support development needs, then everything is empty discourse that we end up never realizing," he lamented.

"If we are not able to fix that, we will have a non-State sector that's not with the Revolution, that's not contributing to the Revolution, that's thinking only of itself and not of everyone, and that is ideological," the state media source quoted the first secretary of the PCC as saying.

"It is up to us, as a Party, to organize that by ensuring that all state institutions fulfill the functions that they must, thereby shifting from diagnosis to the necessary ordering and control actions," he said.

At another point in his speech, Díaz-Canel admitted that the offensive carried out against the private sector, and also against the State one, has not yielded the results the Government expected. Despite this, he pointed to the few achievements that the economic package, announced in December 2023 to "correct distortions," has yielded so far an initiative that does not work, according to Prime Minister Manuel Marrero Cruz at the PCC Central Committee's Plenary Session.

"The offensive we have carried out is to organize what was disorganized, in both the State and non-State sectors. Although its results are still not what they should have been, in a few months it has had an impact on controlling tax evasion, on the Budget, on the ordering of relationships, and on the group work of these entities, as well as including closure of some businesses that were totally illegal," Cubadebate quoted him as saying.

At the beginning of December, despite the widespread crisis that Cuba is suffering, the Government boasted that there were "signs of an ordering of macroeconomic issues," which it attributed to the aforementioned shock plan, termed "Government Projections to Correct Distortions and Boost the Economy in 2024."

At a meeting of the Council of Ministers to evaluate the plan Minister of the Economy and Planning Joaquín Alonso Vázquez referred to "several indicators whose results ratify the complexities that the country is currently facing, such as imports of goods, foreign exchange earnings from exports, energy carriers, and the transportation of cargo and passengers."

However, according to the minister, "there continue to be signs of an ordering of macroeconomic issues" such as "the trend towards a decrease in inflation, both in the monthly index and the year-on-year one, as well as a reduction in the fiscal deficit, the results of the current account, and monetary circulation indicators, which are gradually progressing towards the expected results."

On his X account Cuban economist Pedro Monreal, however, pointed out that "by announcing supposed 'signs of an ordering of macroeconomic issues', the Cuban Ministry of the Economy is distorting the reality:  expected economic contraction in 2024, plus year-on-year inflation probably between 25-30%, which indicates stagflation."

According to the analyst, by reporting a notable reduction in the budget deficit without offering concrete data on expenses and income, Cuba's Finance Ministry evaded analysis of what seems to be the application of a harsh fiscal austerity policy.


"Going from an initial fiscal deficit forecast of 147 billion pesos in 2024 to a result of 29.7 billion at the end of October, could only have been achieved —in a scenario of economic contraction— with an acute reduction in expenses," Monreal wrote.

During the same Plenary Session Jorge Luis Broche Lorenzo, a member of the Secretariat of the Party's Central Committee and head of its Department of Attention to the Social Sector, complained of "the lack of correspondence between the levels of contribution to the private sector budget in relation to its growth dynamics."

In a recent analysis DIARIO DE CUBA showed that Cuba has one of the highest tax burdens on the planet, which, increasingly, weighs on the non-State sector. At the same time, although, in principle, the revenue collected is used to meet social needs and services and finance public policies, in 2024 Cubans have seen a decline in all the services they receive: transportation is disastrous, garbage fills cities, blackouts and drinking water shortages plague the population, while the number of people in poverty is on the rise.

Escape from Cuba

We'll Meet Again - A PBS Documentary - Join Ann Curry as two men search for the people who helped them come to the U.S. when they fled Castro’s Cuba. One hopes to find the family who took him in as a boy while another looks for the shrimp boat skipper who brought him to safety.