logo
US sanctions Brazil health officials over Cuba's overseas medical missions

US sanctions Brazil health officials over Cuba's overseas medical missions

Al Jazeera16 hours ago
The United States has announced it is revoking the visas of Brazilian, African and Caribbean officials over their ties to Cuba's programme that sends doctors abroad, which Washington has described as 'forced labour'.
The US named two Brazilian Ministry of Health officials, Mozart Julio Tabosa Sales and Alberto Kleiman, who have had their visas revoked for working on Brazil's Mais Medicos, or 'More Doctors' programme, which was created in 2013.
In a statement on Wednesday, US Secretary of State Marco Rubio said sanctions were imposed on officials 'involved in abetting the Cuban regime's coercive labour export scheme', which he claimed 'enriches the corrupt Cuban regime and deprives the Cuban people of essential medical care'.
'The Department of State took steps to revoke visas and impose visa restrictions on several Brazilian government officials, former Pan American Health Organization (PAHO) officials, and their family members for their complicity with the Cuban regime's labour export scheme in the Mais Medicos programme,' Rubio said.
In an earlier statement, Rubio also announced visa restrictions for African officials, without specifying the countries involved, as well as the Caribbean country Grenada, for the same reasons.
The Cuban government has called Washington's efforts to stop its medical missions a cynical excuse to go after its foreign currency earnings.
Cuba's deputy director of US affairs, Johana Tablada, said its 'medical cooperation will continue'.
'[Rubio's] priorities speak volumes: financing Israel genocide on Palestine, torturing Cuba, going after health care services for those who need them most,' Tablada wrote on X.
Cuba's international missions are sold to third countries and serve as a main source of foreign currency for the economically isolated nation, which has been subject to decades-long crippling sanctions by the US.
Havana's international medical outreach goes back to the years following the 1959 Cuban Revolution, as Fidel Castro's communist government provided a free or low-cost medical programme to developing nations as an act of international solidarity.
It is estimated that Havana has sent between 135,000 and 400,000 Cuban doctors abroad in total over the past five decades.
Brazilian Minister of Health Alexandre Padilha said his government would not bow to what he called 'unreasonable attacks' on Mais Medicos.
Cuba's contract in the programme was terminated in 2018 after then-President-elect Jair Bolsonaro questioned the terms of the agreement and Cuban doctors' qualifications.
Washington is already engaged in a heated diplomatic row with President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva's government after imposing sanctions on Brazilian officials involved in Bolsonaro's ongoing trial over his alleged coup plot in 2022.
Cuba's healthcare system is public and meant to be universally accessible. But decades of sanctions and a downturn in tourism due to Trump's travel ban mean the one-party state is no longer medically self-sufficient.
Since returning to the White House, the Trump administration has resumed its 'maximum pressure' campaign against Cuba that typified his first term.
Last year, the island nation of 9.7 million people could not afford the $300m needed to import raw materials to produce hundreds of critical medicines.
In July, Trump imposed sanctions against Cuban President Miguel Diaz-Canel, Minister of the Revolutionary Armed Forces Alvaro Lopez Miera, and Minister of the Interior Lazaro Alberto Alvarez Casas for their 'role in the Cuban regime's brutality toward the Cuban people'.
Earlier, the Trump administration also signalled its intention to tighten visa restrictions on Cuban and foreign officials linked to Havana's medical missions around the globe.
Rubio described the medical programme as one where 'medical professionals are 'rented' by other countries at high prices', but 'most of the revenue is kept by the Cuban authorities'.
In 1999, after Hugo Chavez's Bolivarian revolution in Venezuela, Cuba sent medical staff and educators to the country. In return, Cuba bought Venezuelan oil at below-market prices, developing the idea of Havana exporting medical professionals as a source of revenue.
Some 30,000 Cuban medical workers were sent to Venezuela in the first 10 years of the 'Oil for Doctors' programme.
Cuba later received hard currency to set up permanent medical missions in countries including South Africa, Brazil, Ecuador and Qatar.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Lawyers in Brazil submit final statement for Bolsonaro in coup trial
Lawyers in Brazil submit final statement for Bolsonaro in coup trial

Al Jazeera

time13 minutes ago

  • Al Jazeera

Lawyers in Brazil submit final statement for Bolsonaro in coup trial

Lawyers have submitted a final statement on behalf of Brazilian ex-President Jair Bolsonaro in a trial focused on his alleged role in a plot to stay in power despite losing the 2022 election. In a statement submitted on Wednesday evening, Bolsonaro's legal representatives denied the charges against him and said that prosecutors had presented no convincing evidence. 'There is no way to convict Jair Bolsonaro based on the evidence presented in the case, which largely demonstrated that he ordered the transition … and assured his voters that the world would not end on December 31st,' the document states. The right-wing former president faces up to 12 years in prison if convicted of attempting to mount a coup after losing a presidential election to left-wing rival and current President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva. Bolsonaro, who raised alarm in the months leading up to the election by casting doubt on the voting process, has denied involvement in the plot, which allegedly included plans for Lula's assassination. The former leader's legal representatives say the fact that he authorised the transition contradicts the coup allegations. 'This is evidence that eliminates the most essential of the accusatory premises,' they said. Prosecutor-General Paulo Gonet submitted final arguments in July, citing handwritten notes, digital files, message exchanges, and spreadsheets that he said show details of a conspiracy to suppress democracy. Following Bolsonaro's election loss, crowds of his supporters gathered outside of military bases, calling on the armed forces to intervene and prevent Lula from taking office. A group of Bolsonaro's supporters also stormed federal buildings in the capital of Brasilia on January 8, 2023. Some drew parallels to a military coup in the 1960s that marked the beginning of a decades-long period of dictatorship, for which Bolsonaro himself has long expressed fondness. Bolsonaro and his allies, including United States President Donald Trump, have depicted the trial as a politically motivated 'witch hunt'. A recent survey conducted by Datafolha, a Brazilian polling institute, found that more than 50 percent of Brazilians agree with the court's decision to place Bolsonaro under house arrest in August. The survey also found that a majority believe that Supreme Court Justice Alexandre de Moraes, a frequent target of right-wing ire and central figure in the trial, is following the law. Respondents also largely disagreed with the claim that Bolsonaro was being persecuted for political reasons, with 39 percent in agreement and 53 percent in disagreement. Speaking from the White House on Thursday, Trump said Bolsonaro was an 'honest man' and the victim of an attempted 'political execution'. The Trump administration has mounted a pressure campaign to push the court to drop Bolsonaro's case, sanctioning De Moraes and announcing severe sanctions on Brazilian exports to the US. That move has met anger in Brazil and been depicted as an attack on Brazilian sovereignty.

Trump says he thinks Putin will ‘make a deal' on Ukraine
Trump says he thinks Putin will ‘make a deal' on Ukraine

Al Jazeera

timean hour ago

  • Al Jazeera

Trump says he thinks Putin will ‘make a deal' on Ukraine

One day before the leaders of Russia and the United States are set to meet in the US state of Alaska to discuss ending the Russia-Ukraine war, US President Donald Trump said he believes his Russian counterpart is ready 'to make a deal'. In an interview on Fox News Radio on Thursday, Trump said he believed Russian President Vladimir Putin 'wanted the whole thing' – in an apparent reference to his territorial aspirations in Ukraine – but was willing to come to the table and make a deal due to the relationship between the two men. 'I think he wants to get it done. I really feel he wanted the whole thing. I think if it weren't me, if it were somebody else, he would not be talking to anybody,' Trump told interviewer Brian Kilmeade. Trump and Putin will meet in Alaska on Friday for talks on the more than three-year conflict. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy will not be present at the talks, though Trump has said that should Putin signal a willingness to end the war, another meeting between the two leaders would follow. 'I don't know that we're going to get an immediate ceasefire, but I think it's going to come. See, I'm more interested in an immediate peace deal – getting peace fast. And depending on what happens with my meeting, I'm going to be calling up President Zelenskyy and [saying] let's get him over to wherever we're going to meet,' Trump said. He added that there was the possibility they could simply 'stay in Alaska', but also stressed that if the meeting went poorly, 'I'm not calling anyone. I'm going home.' That hedging represents a seeming cautiousness by Trump, who has spoken about being frustrated by Putin's broken promises in the past. Speaking from Washington, DC, Al Jazeera's Shihab Rattansi said Trump's metric for success could be boiled down to what read he had on Putin. 'He very much made it clear that what success means in this context is him being convinced that Vladimir Putin is serious about peace, and then arranging a second meeting that would involve the Ukrainians,' he said. Earlier on Thursday, Putin praised Trump, saying he was 'making quite energetic and sincere efforts to end the fighting'. The words came shortly after Zelenskyy met with British Prime Minister Keir Starmer in London, where they discussed security guarantees for Ukraine that could 'make peace truly durable if the United States succeeds in pressing Russia to stop the killings and engage in genuine, substantive diplomacy', Zelenskyy wrote on X. The meeting, said Al Jazeera's Jonah Hull, 'was about a show of unity ahead of that summit in Alaska'. Hull noted there was a 'sense of some optimism' following the Wednesday call between Trump, Zelenskyy and European leaders. '[Trump] took a somewhat stronger line against Putin than was expected, saying the Russian president faced severe consequences if he didn't meaningfully engage in ceasefire talks,' he noted.

Trump administration sanctions two Mexican drug cartels, announces bounties
Trump administration sanctions two Mexican drug cartels, announces bounties

Al Jazeera

time2 hours ago

  • Al Jazeera

Trump administration sanctions two Mexican drug cartels, announces bounties

The United States Treasury Department has revealed it is sanctioning two Mexican drug cartels, Carteles Unidos and Los Viagras, and seven affiliated individuals on allegations of 'terrorism'. The Treasury Department announced the sanctions on Thursday. Separately, the Justice Department stated it was charging five high-ranking members of Carteles Unidos with crimes related to drug trafficking. 'These actions further President Donald Trump's directive to completely eliminate cartels and transnational criminal organizations threatening the American people,' the Treasury said in a social media post. In a statement, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent explained that the sanctions would help the US government hamstring the cartel's ability to generate revenue, including through cross-border commerce. 'Today's sanctions action draws further attention to the diverse, insidious ways the cartels engage in violent activities and exploit otherwise legitimate commerce,' Bessent said. Both Carteles Unidos and Los Viagras are said to be active in the Mexican state of Michoacan, where the Treasury said that they use funds from drug trafficking to hire mercenaries, bribe officials and buy weapons. Thursday's sanctions will freeze any US-based assets the targeted individuals may have, and people in the US are prohibited from making transactions with them. The Trump administration has pledged to take a hard line against criminal groups and those involved in drug trafficking, including by labelling some Latin American criminal networks as 'foreign terrorist organisations'. Experts, however, have questioned the efficacy of such steps and raised fears that they could backfire, penalising nonprofits and civilians who live and work in gang-controlled territory. Also on Thursday, the Department of Justice announced that it was offering rewards for information leading to the arrests of Carteles Unidos leader Juan Jose Farias Alvarez, also known as 'El Abuelo' or 'The Grandfather', as well as Alfonso Fernandez Magallon, Luis Enrique Barragan Chavez, Edgar Orozco Cabadas and Nicolas Sierra Santana. They are charged with participation in a conspiracy to manufacture and distribute drugs for importation to the US. Altogether, the rewards totalled $26m, with the highest single bounty offered for Farias Alvarez, at $10m. Earlier this week, the Mexican government sent 26 suspected cartel members to the US to face charges, the second such transfer this year. Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum emphasised that the transfer was a 'sovereign decision' she undertook, but critics have expressed concern that the US has been exerting increasing pressure on her government to bend to its will. Last week, for example, US media reported that Trump signed an order authorising the US military to carry out operations against cartels and other criminal groups, a move that Mexican politicians have warned could result in US troops on Mexican soil. That, critics warn, would constitute a serious violation of the country's sovereignty. Sheinbaum, however, attempted to dispel concerns in a news conference: 'There will be no invasion of Mexico,' she said. Mexico, meanwhile, has also called on the US to take greater steps to restrict the massive flow of weapons from sellers and manufacturers north of the border. Mexican authorities and other experts have argued that those weapons fuel the violence committed by criminal groups. But the US has rebuffed such efforts, and in June, the US Supreme Court struck down a lawsuit from the Mexican government arguing that the flow of illicit firearms constituted negligence.

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