
Catholics in secular Cuba hail Francis as 'bridge'
The country, which was officially atheist for three decades, declared three days of mourning for the pontiff, and Cuban President Miguel Diaz-Canel attended a special mass at Havana's cathedral Thursday.
Ex-president Raul Castro -- brother of revolutionary leader Fidel, who had initially cracked down on religion -- sent a message of condolences calling Francis a "man of integrity."
The Catholic Church's first Latin American pope played a special role in Cuban history, negotiating a resumption of diplomatic relations with Washington under president Barack Obama in 2015, after decades of Cold War estrangement.
He became the third pope to visit the island, once in both 2015 and 2016.
The Communist Party of Cuba declared the state secular, no longer atheist, in 1992, allowing for greater religious freedom.
Havana's cathedral, which normally draws only a trickle of worshippers, was packed Thursday to bid a final farewell to Francis.
The pontiff, who died Monday aged 88, "fostered dialogue, especially between Cuba and the United States, which was very difficult," said 75-year-old Osvaldo Ferreira, a cathedral custodian.
The pope, added 24-year-old doctor Rayneris Lopez, was "like a bridge" between Cuba and the United States.
Pope 'loved this country'
The detente that Francis helped foster has suffered setbacks since Obama left office in 2017.
Obama's successor Donald Trump severed ties with Havana during his first term, and toughened sanctions now in place for over 60 years.
In 2022, the administration of Joe Biden added Cuba to a religious freedom blacklist, pointing to arrests of religious figures over their purported role in rare public protests, as well as restrictions on certain churches.
Cuban Foreign Minister Bruno Rodriguez at the time rejected the accusation saying: "It is known that in Cuba there is religious freedom."
In one of his final official acts, Biden on January 14 removed Cuba from a US list of state terror sponsors in return for the communist island agreeing to free 553 prisoners in a deal also mediated by the Vatican.
But six days later marked the swearing-in of Trump for a second term. He swiftly overturned the deal.
Havana claims it has released all 553 people subject to the deal with Biden, including 231 considered "political prisoners" by rights groups.
Most of the 231 had been rounded up in a crackdown on mass protests against the Cuban government in July 2021.
During his homily on Thursday, the Holy See's envoy to Cuba Antoine Camilleri recalled the late pontiff had "loved this country, the Cuban church, and the Cuban people very much."
"They are a people with wounds, like all people, but who know how to hold their arms open, to walk with hope, because their vocation is greatness," Camilleri said Francis told him in a meeting in February.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


France 24
17 hours ago
- France 24
As NATO ups defence spending, can Europe produce the weapons?
But as Europe promises to ramp up defence spending and wean itself from reliance on the United States, a key question looms: can it produce enough weapons? "This is really keeping me up at night, making sure that we not only ramp up spending, but also ramp up defence industrial production," NATO chief Mark Rutte said Thursday. More than three years into Moscow's war on Ukraine, NATO says Russia's weapons production far outstrips the West's and has warned that the Kremlin could be ready to attack the alliance within five years. The demands on NATO's European members are huge: new hardware targets agreed this month will require the biggest armament spree in decades. Rutte has pushed for a commitment to bolster defence spending to 3.5 percent of GDP within seven years, plus 1.5 percent on security-related areas such as infrastructure. That would likely work out as hundreds of billions of extra euros a year. While countries seem largely on board, German defence minister Boris Pistorius last week pointed to one challenge "nobody really discusses". "It is about how much money is really able to be spent... if industry is not able to deliver what we ordered," he told his NATO colleagues. The push to bolster output will be prominent in The Hague with NATO hosting an industry forum alongside the summit. 'Need the orders' After years of underinvestment following the Cold War, the European Union has unveiled a raft of initiatives since Moscow's 2022 invasion. National budgets have increased and Brussels has sought to plug the funding gap with plans that could mobilise a further 800 billion euros ($924 billion). A major focus is making sure most of that money is spent buying weapons in Europe so the continent can stand more on its own two feet. But persistent gripes remain: businesses lack long-term orders, capacity is too low, costs are too high, production times too long and the industry too fragmented. "To some extent, the budgetary debates and the spending debates are behind us. The question is, how do you translate all of that funding into actual capabilities?" Hugues Lavandier, head of aerospace and defence for Europe at McKinsey, told a Brussels conference. Waiting times for new weaponry can stretch for years, and for some key equipment such as longer-range missiles, Europe still relies on the United States. But proponents say the continent has the potential to meet demand -- provided governments and defence firms get a move on. "Our assessment is that we can produce 95 plus percent of whatever we need to credibly deter and be ready," said Francois Arbault, a top official overseeing the defence industry at the European Commission. "But we need the orders and we need that manufacturing power to be actually materialised in additional investment, because you need to ramp up." 'Bang for our buck' Industry leaders say orders are picking up, if not as fast or for as long a period as hoped, and insist businesses are already putting money into expanding. The CEO of Swedish defence giant Saab, Micael Johansson, told AFP his firm increased its workforce by 6,000 people and quadrupled ammunition in recent years. "Absolutely, we can do more -- and fortunately, many of us have invested at risk to increase capacity," he said. "We're getting the signals that demand will be high, but I can't say that I know exactly what target levels we're aiming for." One fear officials have is that a sudden splurge in spending could lead to price hikes. "There's a real risk that we get, you know, less bang for our buck because of inflation," said Matthew Whitaker, the US ambassador to NATO. "We need to make sure that it's incremental, that it's measured, but that it's sustained." To help smooth out barriers blocking investment, the EU is set next week to unveil a push to strip away red tape. "It cannot be that the defence industry needs to wait five years to have a permit to build a new factory," EU defence commissioner Andrius Kubilius said. "(Russian leader Vladimir) Putin will not wait for us to get our paperwork in order." One way to bolster Europe's capacity long-term could be turning to battle-hardened Ukraine. As Russia's war has raged on, Ukrainian firms have become experts at cost-cutting and the country is now a leader in drone technology. "The Ukrainian industry is very important," said Guntram Wolff at the Bruegel think tank in Brussels. © 2025 AFP


France 24
17 hours ago
- France 24
Betraying the revolution: Cuban students reject dollarization
The new pricing structure, which came into effect on May 30, punished people who exceeded their meager monthly data limit of six gigabytes with steep fees. On top of that, it made rates cheaper to top up in dollars than in Cuba's own currency, the peso. State telecommunications company Etecsa said the increases were necessary to fund investments in the mobile network. But it was also seen as a ploy by the cash-strapped communist government to bring in much-needed foreign currency. Students in particular reacted angrily to the measure, which not only makes it harder for them to stay connected, but deepens the chasm on the island between dollar-toting haves and peso-using have-nots. In rare scenes throughout the one-party state, students at several universities organized a boycott of classes, and students' unions issued statements rejecting the reform. Anxious to avoid a repeat of the protests that rocked the island in July 2021, when thousands of people demonstrated over shortages of basic goods, the government has taken a conciliatory approach. The Havana students' union this week announced the creation of a discussion group with students, teaching staff from a dozen university faculties in Havana, and Etecsa's representatives. But on social media, students say they have come under pressure from security forces to fall in line. In a video shared on social media, which AFP was unable to verify, a medical student claims she was threatened by a state security agent on campus with being taken to "an official place where you won't be able to use your phone." The protests have ballooned into a wider mobilization over the subtle dollarization of the Cuban economy. Students at the University of Holguin's law faculty in eastern Cuba issued a statement denouncing the new mobile tariffs as "elitist and classist" and said the growing shift towards dollars was an affront to the principle of equal rights. In another viral video, a medical student at the University of Havana warned that the currency of the United States was becoming the country's "flagship currency." For opposition activist Manuel Cuesta Morua, the protests mark a return to the kind of activism last seen on campuses in the 1950s, which forged the revolutionary careers of Castro and others. Today's students are spearheading "a revolution within the revolution," Cuesta Morua said, adding that their tirades against inequality marked a return to the "original discourse of a revolution that became militarized and more conservative" over time. Not against communism The row over the internet fees comes amid the emergence of a two-speed society on the communist island, which is mired in its worst economic crisis in 30 years. Inflation rose by 190 percent between 2018 and 2023, according to official figures, eroding the value of the peso against the dollar. Food, fuel and medicine are all in short supply. Cubans who receive dollar remittances from relatives abroad fare better, with well-stocked dollar payment grocery stores and gas stations only too happy to serve them. 'Last straw' In January, the government announced a partial dollarization of the economy, claiming it wanted to get its hands on some of the greenbacks. But mobile top-ups in dollars were "the last straw" for many, according to Tamarys Bahamonde, a Cuban economist at American University in Washington. In a joint manifesto, students from various faculties in Havana made it clear they were not "opposed to the government nor the revolution but to specific policies that betray its (egalitarian) ideal." For Bahamonde, the crisis underscores the widening gulf between Cuba's decision-makers and its citizens. To win over the students, Etecsa last week announced that they would be allowed two monthly top-ups at the basic rate of 360 pesos ($3), compared with one for the rest of the population. But the students rejected the offer, saying they wanted everyone to benefit. For activist Cuesta Morua, their reaction was proof that young Cubans, rather than the government, have become the voice of the people. "It is the students... who are representing the country's concerns."

LeMonde
a day ago
- LeMonde
With LA in crisis, Democrats are again caught in the immigration debate trap
The staging was expensive, but its political value was priceless. According to the Pentagon, the bill for deploying the National Guard and 700 Marines to Los Angeles, a move ordered by President Donald Trump to "liberate" the city from rioters, has already reached $134 million. But the benefit for the US president was immediate. Footage of soldiers facing masked protesters, some waving Latin American flags or throwing projectiles, has flooded social media and television screens. The looting of an Apple store only reinforced the narrative of a criminal, predatory protest. Trump condemned "insurrectionists," "agitators" and "paid troublemakers" – terms delegitimizing protests regardless of their motivations. Throughout his election campaign, Trump pushed the narrative that the United States was undergoing a "migrant invasion," claiming that there are "more than 20 million" undocumented migrants, supposedly invited in by the Biden administration. Now the billionaire has pushed a similar narrative: He described, despite the facts, an insurrection in California intent on resisting the enforcement of immigration law. He has an ally in this endeavor: the Democratic camp, which is incapable of articulating a consensus view and offering a clear message on immigration. Former US president Joe Biden had been slow to grasp the urgency at the Mexican border. But the entire left seemed adrift, wavering between condemnation of Trump's crackdown and an airy promotion of immigration's virtues.