Cuba accepts US humanitarian aid after Hurricane Melissa

Cuba has accepted a donation of humanitarian aid from the United States, channeled through the US Conference of Catholic Bishops, to support recovery efforts following Hurricane Melissa's passage in October 2025. However, the Cuban government criticizes the lack of official communication from Washington and warns against the political exploitation of the assistance. The aid will reach victims without conditions, as part of broader recovery initiatives on the island.

Hurricane Melissa struck Cuba on October 29, 2025, prompting immediate intensive recovery efforts and initial solidarity assistance. Seventy-seven days later, on January 14, 2026, the US State Department publicly announced that part of the humanitarian aid would arrive in the country. However, there has been no official communication from the US government to Cuban authorities confirming the shipment.

It was the Cuban Catholic Church that informed local authorities of the US Conference of Catholic Bishops' intention to serve as the channel for this government-provided assistance. As a matter of principle, Cuba does not oppose aid from governments or organizations as long as it directly benefits the people and is not used for political gain under the guise of humanitarian gestures.

Contributions are received, organized, and distributed in Cuba through the officially responsible government authorities, with participation from entities like the Catholic Church that have proven experience in such processes. The donation is accepted without conditions and is viewed as a gesture from the American people, whose taxes fund the government's public resources.

This material assistance will be directed to victims and affected communities, though it constitutes only a fraction of the efforts by the Cuban people and government, as well as aid received from various parts of the world, including non-governmental US organizations. Despite any statements from the State Department, the facts regarding Cuba's recovery management remain unchanged.

Cuba's response highlights transparency in distribution and rejects any opportunistic manipulation of humanitarian gestures.

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Two sailboats carrying humanitarian aid from Convoy Nuestra América arrive safely in Havana harbor, greeted by locals.
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Sailboats from Convoy Nuestra América arrive safely in Cuba

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The US Coast Guard confirmed that the two sailboats from Convoy Nuestra América, carrying humanitarian aid to Cuba, arrived safely in Havana. Mexico did not request US assistance during the search. A third vessel from the convoy had already arrived without issues.

Two Mexican ships carrying urgent humanitarian aid arrived in Havana's port on Thursday, as the United Nations warns of a humanitarian collapse on the island due to the Trump administration's oil blockade. Infant mortality is rising in Cuba as the United States tightens its decades-old economic embargo on the country, part of Trump's efforts to overthrow the Cuban government.

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Canada's House of Commons Standing Committee on Foreign Affairs and International Development held a special session on February 26, 2026, to address the humanitarian crisis in Cuba, featuring testimony from Cuban activists. The meeting came days after Cuban ambassador Rodrigo Malmierca Díaz appeared, blaming a US 'oil blockade.' Cuban civil society groups urged Canada to push for political change on the island.

The Cuban government announced on Holy Thursday, April 2, 2026, the release of 2,010 people deprived of liberty as a humanitarian gesture during Holy Week. The measure excludes those who committed crimes against authority, charges commonly applied to political prisoners. No list of beneficiaries has been published, preventing verification of inclusions.

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In San Salvador, the Popular Rebellion and Resistance Bloc (BRP) launched a campaign to send aid to the Cuban people, besieged by the United States blockade.

One week after a February 25 gunfire exchange off Cuba's Villa Clara coast that killed four on a Florida boat, US leaders including Secretary Rubio, President Trump, and VP Vance pledged investigations and hinted at policy shifts, amid a regional summit snubbing Cuba and new US fuel aid announcements.

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