U.S. sanctions
against Cuba are endangering lives and must be lifted
GENEVA (8 June 2026) - UN High Commissioner for Human
Rights Volker Türk warned on Monday that the expansion of sanctions imposed by
the U.S. against Cuba is causing widespread harm to the population and
endangering lives. He urged that these sanctions be halted.
“The fuel restrictions imposed since early 2026 and
recent tightening of extraterritorial sanctions, taken together, are directly
harming Cubans, especially the most vulnerable. Children are dying because
doctors lack access to essential medical supplies and medicines. This is
unacceptable," said Türk. "These sanctions must be lifted
immediately."
The U.S. declaration of a national emergency in
January disrupted fuel shipments to Cuba, severely reducing the country's fuel
reserves by mid-May. This depletion has led to daily blackouts that now
frequently exceed 20 hours. Additional sanctions were imposed in May, including
some with extraterritorial effect on private entities, such as traders,
insurers, tourism or shipping companies, financial institutions, and others
involved in fuel supply or engaged with the country's energy, defence, mining,
finance, and security sectors.
These measures, combined, are significantly affecting
the population’s human rights, notably their access to essential supplies and
services, including water, food and healthcare.
Critical medical services such as oncology, dialysis,
and maternal health are under severe strain. Recent public health data shows
alarming trends, including a doubling of infant mortality to 9.9 per 1,000
births and a decline in childhood cancer survival rates from 85 per cent to 65
per cent, since the fuel restrictions were imposed. Essential medicines are in
critical short supply, with supply levels down to about 30 per cent. Fuel
shortages are disrupting the agri-food chain, leading to a reported 60 per cent
decrease in food production and spikes in the costs of basic food items.
“Such severe sanctions packages that target entire
sectors of an economy and produce broad, indiscriminate, and harsh effects on
populations are incompatible with basic principles of international human
rights law,” said the UN Human Rights Chief.
In all circumstances, basic humanitarian activities
should remain protected. However, many private sector actors are imposing
restrictions beyond legal requirements due to concerns about sanctions. This
leads to further delays in procurement, shipping disruptions, and growing
uncertainty in humanitarian supply chains.
The combined impacts of these coercive measures and
operational restrictions are also hindering the work of humanitarian agencies,
including those within the United Nations system, in providing essential relief
and assistance. Recently, the suspension of services by major shipping
companies due to risk-aversion affected more than 2,900 metric tons of
humanitarian food cargo.
“Cuba faces increasing isolation. Companies are
leaving. Fewer airlines fly to the country. It is almost disconnected from
international payment systems. Rising summer temperatures risk increasing the
spread of vector borne and waterborne diseases. The hurricane season further
increases exposure. This creates a perfect storm for social and economic
deterioration and suffering for the Cuban people,” said the High Commissioner.
Also emphasising that companies have human rights
responsibilities, the High Commissioner called on business entities and
institutions to avoid overcompliance and blanket disengagement, in accordance
with the UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights.
Given the tensions created by the situation and the
increased risk of social unrest in Cuba, Türk urged the authorities to exercise
utmost restraint and to respect the rights to freedom of expression,
association and peaceful assembly.
The UN Human Rights Chief also called on the Cuban
Government to release all those arbitrarily detained, and to engage in
constructive dialogue and confidence building efforts to ease social tensions.
ENDS
For
more information and media requests, please contact:
In
Geneva
Shabia
Mantoo - shabia.mantoo@un.org
Jeremy
Laurence - jeremy.laurence@un.org
Marta
Hurtado - marta.hurtadogomez@un.org
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