The Prague Post - Foreign companies take flight from US-sanctioned Cuba

EUR -
AED 4.272104
AFN 72.696293
ALL 95.4296
AMD 428.624119
ANG 2.082417
AOA 1067.692126
ARS 1659.400534
AUD 1.620361
AWG 2.093513
AZN 1.997667
BAM 1.953361
BBD 2.342206
BDT 142.753598
BGN 1.942222
BHD 0.438502
BIF 3461.274864
BMD 1.163063
BND 1.487062
BOB 8.03607
BRL 5.841478
BSD 1.162963
BTN 110.728743
BWP 15.582744
BYN 3.21273
BYR 22796.030687
BZD 2.33891
CAD 1.609504
CDF 2651.783194
CHF 0.915708
CLF 0.02631
CLP 1035.478071
CNY 7.86527
CNH 7.865538
COP 4171.208391
CRC 529.845264
CUC 1.163063
CUP 30.821164
CVE 110.636401
CZK 24.206592
DJF 206.699535
DKK 7.472791
DOP 67.399563
DZD 154.984372
EGP 60.301894
ERN 17.445942
ETB 183.705764
FJD 2.552865
FKP 0.864803
GBP 0.863748
GEL 3.093673
GGP 0.864803
GHS 13.700974
GIP 0.864803
GMD 84.903632
GNF 10208.774985
GTQ 8.867043
GYD 243.256268
HKD 9.114632
HNL 30.903204
HRK 7.534086
HTG 152.231885
HUF 354.826038
IDR 20746.714051
ILS 3.311002
IMP 0.864803
INR 111.403984
IQD 1523.612255
IRR 1600374.398935
ISK 143.417394
JEP 0.864803
JMD 182.941578
JOD 0.824588
JPY 185.955713
KES 150.500432
KGS 101.709564
KHR 4663.881953
KMF 493.138494
KPW 1046.588156
KRW 1764.040555
KWD 0.359618
KYD 0.969102
KZT 571.314021
LAK 25529.228368
LBP 104152.272833
LKR 386.672185
LRD 212.404338
LSL 18.969223
LTL 3.434222
LVL 0.703526
LYD 7.379613
MAD 10.699599
MDL 20.113146
MGA 4867.417375
MKD 61.634353
MMK 2442.094305
MNT 4160.705315
MOP 9.3876
MRU 46.498942
MUR 55.140945
MVR 17.923145
MWK 2020.240008
MXN 20.113425
MYR 4.610843
MZN 74.325527
NAD 18.97007
NGN 1593.349122
NIO 42.565895
NOK 10.801237
NPR 177.168071
NZD 1.96132
OMR 0.447201
PAB 1.162963
PEN 3.959109
PGK 5.070082
PHP 71.736581
PKR 323.683635
PLN 4.234597
PYG 7035.276185
QAR 4.237618
RON 5.255767
RSD 117.427465
RUB 85.132224
RWF 1700.397799
SAR 4.369225
SBD 9.334757
SCR 15.587836
SDG 698.411511
SEK 10.822014
SGD 1.487672
SHP 0.868344
SLE 28.669926
SLL 24388.847626
SOS 664.686057
SRD 43.252562
STD 24073.051542
STN 24.831391
SVC 10.175426
SYP 128.55577
SZL 18.981311
THB 37.962015
TJS 10.733836
TMT 4.08235
TND 3.386254
TOP 2.800376
TRY 53.428195
TTD 7.888252
TWD 36.561463
TZS 3038.501877
UAH 51.567512
UGX 4378.589328
USD 1.163063
UYU 46.732052
UZS 13921.861437
VES 648.147712
VND 30626.350922
VUV 136.399105
WST 3.1596
XAF 655.147427
XAG 0.015473
XAU 0.000259
XCD 3.143235
XCG 2.09591
XDR 0.815718
XOF 654.804437
XPF 119.331742
YER 277.535846
ZAR 18.92315
ZMK 10468.957925
ZMW 21.020025
ZWL 374.505744
  • RBGPF

    -3.0200

    60.52

    -4.99%

  • CMSC

    -0.1000

    22.67

    -0.44%

  • RYCEF

    0.3200

    17.2

    +1.86%

  • BTI

    -0.5400

    60.46

    -0.89%

  • NGG

    0.6400

    80.64

    +0.79%

  • RELX

    -1.2200

    33.38

    -3.65%

  • BCE

    -0.4200

    24.64

    -1.7%

  • GSK

    -0.3100

    49

    -0.63%

  • RIO

    2.7100

    111.67

    +2.43%

  • BP

    0.4600

    43.4

    +1.06%

  • AZN

    -2.2600

    177.45

    -1.27%

  • CMSD

    -0.0900

    22.71

    -0.4%

  • VOD

    0.1500

    15.12

    +0.99%

  • JRI

    0.1100

    12.77

    +0.86%

  • BCC

    0.8900

    69.22

    +1.29%

Foreign companies take flight from US-sanctioned Cuba
Foreign companies take flight from US-sanctioned Cuba / Photo: ADALBERTO ROQUE - AFP

Foreign companies take flight from US-sanctioned Cuba

With a US deadline to sever ties with Cuba's military conglomerate GAESA fast approaching, foreign companies had by Tuesday vastly reduced their presence on the island.

Text size:

The departures are wreaking havoc on Cuba's already devastated economy, as the island creaks under the weight of an energy blockade imposed in January by the United States, which has piled on further sanctions since then.

As President Donald Trump openly muses about seizing control of the island, his administration has notably targeted GAESA, a major player in the Cuban economy.

An executive order issued on May 1 froze the conglomerate's US assets and penalized foreign companies that work with it.

These companies have until Friday to adjust their activities, according to the US Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC).

A flurry of departures and suspended activities in recent weeks suggests that the warning has worked.

"The short-term impact on the Cuban economy of all these international companies leaving is devastating," Cuban economist and consultant Daniel Torralbas told AFP.

2026 has been "the worst year in Cuba's economic history in the past 70 years," he added.

- Retreat -

Sanctioned companies could have their assets frozen or encounter difficulties in accessing the international financial system.

The Canadian hotel group Blue Diamond Resorts, a major player in Cuba's tourism sector, said Monday it had shut down operations on the island, citing difficult tourism conditions without explicitly referring to US sanctions.

Spanish hotel group Iberostar was withdrawing from a dozen Cuban facilities it managed in partnership with GAESA-linked companies, several sources told AFP on Tuesday.

The group had decided to "pull out of the hotels it managed with the tourism group Gaviota," which is part of GAESA, according to one source.

"As of June 1, Iberostar is pulling out of all its hotels (run with) Gaviota," another tourism industry source confirmed.

The Mallorca-based group, which declined to provide details when contacted by AFP, will continue to co-manage hotels owned by Cuba's tourism ministry, the sources added.

Two more hotel groups, Spain's Melia and Indonesia's Archipelago International, are also considering reducing activities or withdrawing completely from Cuba, sources said.

Two European shipping companies, France's CMA CGM and Germany's Hapag-Lloyd, meanwhile announced the temporary suspension of freight bookings to Cuba, citing Trump's executive order.

On May 7, Canadian mining company Sherritt announced its departure from Cuba, where it has mined nickel and cobalt in a joint venture with state-owned General Nickel Company S.A. since the 1990s.

- 'Slander' -

US Secretary of State Marco Rubio, a Cuban-American and Havana's fiercest critic, has accused GAESA of enriching the elites at the expense of ordinary citizens.

"A 'state within the state' that is accountable to no one and hoards the profits from its businesses for the benefit of a small elite," he said.

Havana hit back at the allegations on Tuesday, insisting the conglomerate was created as a necessary counterbalance to the US trade embargo dating to 1962.

It called the measures "the most intense, disproportionate, and dangerous escalation in the recent history of relations between Cuba and the United States."

It said GAESA's "countless" services included sustaining the economy during the Covid-19 pandemic and building more than 10,000 homes.

Its work "speaks for itself, and it does so above the state slander concocted in Washington," the statement added.

A.Slezak--TPP