logo
Cuban Minister Ousted After Accusing Beggars of Faking Poverty

Cuban Minister Ousted After Accusing Beggars of Faking Poverty

New York Times18-07-2025
Cuba's communist government has long prided itself on its ability to meet the basic needs of the island's population, despite persistent evidence to the contrary.
The contrast between the official government line and reality was brought into sharp relief this week when a government minister went on television and addressed the issue of people begging on the streets.
The minister, Marta Elena Feitó Cabrera, who oversaw labor and social security, said on Monday that the island's beggars were faking poverty to make 'easy' money.
The backlash was swift in a country mired in economic misery, where many struggle to afford food. Barely 24 hours later Ms. Feitó was out of a job. The government said she had resigned because of her lack of 'objectivity and sensitivity.'
While the Communist Party remains firmly in charge, Cuba's government has faced intensifying anger among ordinary Cubans who have lost patience with the six-decade old socialist system imposed by the revolutionary leader Fidel Castro.
Ms Feitó's ouster was usually fast by the standards of Cuba's often glacial bureaucracy.
'In the past, other ministers have said very unpopular things and have not been forced to resign,' said Carlos Alzugaray, a political analyst and retired Cuban diplomat who lives in Havana. 'What is unexpected in this case is the rapid popular reaction and the very quick reaction of the president.'
Want all of The Times? Subscribe.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

A Kennedy Toils in Mississippi, Tracing His Grandfather's Path
A Kennedy Toils in Mississippi, Tracing His Grandfather's Path

New York Times

time43 minutes ago

  • New York Times

A Kennedy Toils in Mississippi, Tracing His Grandfather's Path

Joe Kennedy III, the former Democratic congressman from Massachusetts, gazed out his window at endless fields of cotton and soybeans as he drove across the Mississippi Delta one sweltering afternoon last month. He was a long way from home, but in a sense returning to it. 'People living here have been receiving boil-water notices for two years now,' he said, using an expletive. 'We should be banging the drums on this every day.' Mr. Kennedy, 44, was retracing the steps of his grandfather, Robert F. Kennedy, the former attorney general and candidate for president, who toured the Delta in 1967 and encountered the kind of hunger and poverty more often associated with the developing world. 'Those images Bobby took away of children with bloated stomachs and open sores had a huge impact on him,' said Evan Thomas, a biographer of both the elder Kennedy and his brother, President John F. Kennedy. Mr. Kennedy nodded to the history. 'I know a bit about my grandfather's visit to the Delta back in the '60s, and how it changed and outraged him to see this in the richest country in the world,' he said. 'I'm proud that my family has spent a lot of their years in office advocating for these people.' Mr. Kennedy is on a mission to continue the legacy of an American political family that has in recent years lost some of its liberal luster. It angers him that his uncle Robert F. Kennedy Jr., the health and human services secretary, is a key figure in an administration that is overturning core values of his family. The health secretary has defended work requirements for Medicaid recipients, 'which do not work,' the younger Mr. Kennedy said. 'The only thing they succeed at is kicking people off Medicaid who need it.' Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

Puerto Rico Abandons $20 Billion LNG Deal
Puerto Rico Abandons $20 Billion LNG Deal

Yahoo

time8 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Puerto Rico Abandons $20 Billion LNG Deal

Puerto Rico's government has pulled the plug on contract talks with New Fortress Energy after the island's federally appointed oversight board declined to approve a proposed $20-billion LNG supply deal, upending years of negotiations and raising questions about the future shape of its energy transition. According to a report by Hart Energy, the Financial Oversight and Management Board for Puerto Rico withheld support for the contract earlier this month, citing concerns about cost, duration, and long-term fuel dependency. In response, the Puerto Rico government formally canceled negotiations with New Fortress, despite the company's dominant position in the island's LNG market. New Fortress had been in line to supply fuel for the state-owned Puerto Rico Electric Power Authority (PREPA), whose fleet includes aging oil- and gas-fired plants awaiting conversion or decommissioning. The canceled deal was expected to cover LNG imports for a period of up to 25 years, potentially extending New Fortress's role as the island's primary gas supplier well into the 2040s. The collapse of the agreement leaves a significant vacuum in Puerto Rico's energy planning. According to the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA), natural gas, primarily LNG, accounted for approximately 34% of the island's electricity generation in 2023, with petroleum making up the majority. Although full-year 2024 data is not yet available, analysts at the Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis (IEEFA) had warned that Puerto Rico's increasing reliance on LNG contracts could entrench fossil fuel use at the expense of federally supported renewable energy goals. In parallel, the U.S. Department of Energy is preparing to disburse nearly $1 billion in solar and storage funding through the Puerto Rico Energy Resilience Fund. As of July, however, local permitting constraints and utility interconnection delays had slowed the rollout of community-scale renewable projects. The New Fortress deal had also come under scrutiny for bypassing competitive procurement rules. While the company already supplies LNG to the San Juan combined-cycle plant and EcoEléctrica's Peñuelas facility, its attempt to lock in a 25-year sole-source contract drew criticism from public interest attorneys and environmental groups. Legal scholars warned the deal could have violated key provisions of Puerto Rico's energy reform laws. For New Fortress, which has not issued any public comment on the deal's breakdown, the canceled contract represents a setback in its bid to expand LNG operations across the Caribbean. The company is still advancing its Fast LNG project in Mexico, with modular floating liquefaction units aimed at flexible export markets, including potentially Puerto Rico. While one cargo was delivered to Puerto Rico in early 2025, no current-quarter shipments have been confirmed. Without a long-term anchor contract, its foothold on the island may be more vulnerable than previously assumed. Puerto Rico's Energy Bureau has not announced whether a new solicitation process will follow. With the island's debt restructuring still underway and federal funding tied to grid modernization, the question now is whether energy planners will reframe the mix around renewables, or seek a scaled-down LNG alternative. By Charles Kennedy for More Top Reads From this article on

Haiti sends troops to Mexico for training as gang violence rages on
Haiti sends troops to Mexico for training as gang violence rages on

CNN

time13 hours ago

  • CNN

Haiti sends troops to Mexico for training as gang violence rages on

Haiti has sent 150 soldiers to train in Mexico as the Caribbean country grapples with rampant gang violence. The troops departed Port-au-Prince on Thursday and will spend the next three months on a training course in Mexico. A total of 700 Haitian soldiers will ultimately take part in the program. Haitian Prime Minister Alix Didier Fils-Aimé said the initiative is part of a broader roadmap focused on restoring security, revitalizing public institutions and setting up elections. 'It illustrates the government's firm determination to restore republican order, reinstate state authority throughout the country, and ensure the protection of every citizen,' a statement from the government read. Mexico's security forces have had extensive experience battling criminal groups, particularly international drug cartels, though those efforts have failed to significantly reduce violence and homicide rates remain at near record levels. CNN has reached out to Mexico's government for more information on how it would train Haitian troops. In Haiti, gang attacks have left thousands dead and wounded in recent years. Over 80% of the capital city Port-au-Prince has been estimated to be under gang control, and nearly 1.3 million people nationwide are internally displaced because of the violence, the UN says. Haiti has repeatedly sought international help to restore security, to little effect. Last year, it welcomed hundreds of Kenyan police officers from a multinational security support mission (MSS) funded largely by the United States. At least two of the Kenyan officers have been killed and the violence has not abated. Since the MSS arrived, gangs have spread increasingly into rural areas, seizing swathes of territory in the agriculturally critical Artibonite region. Last week, armed attacks in the area uprooted an additional 15,000 people, the UN says.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store