Dernière minute
KR시민단체, 계양구 구의원 폭행 사건에 자진 사퇴 촉구RUЧерный дым окутал Киев из-за пожаров, жителям советуют не выходить на улицуRUВ Вишневом объявили эвакуацию из-за угрозы детонации после удара ВС РФINTech Employees Risk Wealth by Holding Too Much Company StockARدراسات جديدة تربط استخدام الأطفال للهواتف ليلاً بالتنمر الإلكتروني وزيادة الاستخدام الإشكاليCN武陵山区腹地添“新工位”:指尖兴业 枝头富民INZlatan Ibrahimović and Thierry Henry Pay Tribute to Neymar After International RetirementDEMehrheit der Deutschen gegen Ausweitung befristeter ArbeitsverträgePLMapy Google w Warszawie z obraźliwymi nazwami. Kto za tym stoi?DETrump soll sich bei Fifa für Balogun-Einsatz eingesetzt habenKR시민단체, 계양구 구의원 폭행 사건에 자진 사퇴 촉구RUЧерный дым окутал Киев из-за пожаров, жителям советуют не выходить на улицуRUВ Вишневом объявили эвакуацию из-за угрозы детонации после удара ВС РФINTech Employees Risk Wealth by Holding Too Much Company StockARدراسات جديدة تربط استخدام الأطفال للهواتف ليلاً بالتنمر الإلكتروني وزيادة الاستخدام الإشكاليCN武陵山区腹地添“新工位”:指尖兴业 枝头富民INZlatan Ibrahimović and Thierry Henry Pay Tribute to Neymar After International RetirementDEMehrheit der Deutschen gegen Ausweitung befristeter ArbeitsverträgePLMapy Google w Warszawie z obraźliwymi nazwami. Kto za tym stoi?DETrump soll sich bei Fifa für Balogun-Einsatz eingesetzt haben
Newsgather
BackCuba's President Admits "Urgent Changes" Needed to Overcome Crisis
Cuba's President Admits "Urgent Changes" Needed to Overcome Crisis
En développement
Euronews News18.06.2026Monde3 dk okuma

Cuba's President Admits "Urgent Changes" Needed to Overcome Crisis

L'essentiel

  • Cuban President Miguel Díaz-Canel acknowledged the need for "urgent changes" to address a severe economic crisis, admitting that internal issues like "slowness, bureaucracy" contribute significantly, not just the US blockade.
  • He cited China and Vietnam as potential models for reform.

Résumé généré par IA

Pourquoi c'est important

Cuba's communist government faces its worst economic crisis in decades, marked by severe shortages and power cuts. President Díaz-Canel has historically blamed the US embargo, but now admits internal factors are also significant.

Taille de police

Cuba's communist model needs "urgent changes" to overcome a major crisis which cannot be blamed solely on a crippling US oil blockade, President Miguel Díaz-Canel said in his frankest admission yet of the need for radical reforms.

While Havana's impulse has been to blame its problems on a more-than-six-decade US trade embargo and more recent blockade, Díaz-Canel admitted in remarks broadcast on Thursday there were "obstacles that don't come from outside, nor the blockade."

He called out "slowness, bureaucracy and norms that impede those who want to produce" as well as "decisions that we have put off" for contributing to the worst crisis in living memory.

"The situation calls for urgent and necessary changes," he told the Communist Party Central Committee.

Díaz-Canel was speaking at a party meeting convened hastily to fast-track reforms aimed at boosting the private sector and attracting investment from millions of Cubans who have fled abroad.

The measures are part of an eleventh-hour bid to stave off economic collapse in the face of unprecedented US pressure.

They are expected to be approved by the National Assembly, which rubber-stamps legislation, later Thursday after being endorsed by the Communist Party.

'Backs against the wall'

Few details of the changes have been forthcoming but Díaz-Canel cited China and Vietnam as possible models for opening Cuba's economy to the world six decades after the overthrow of a US-backed dictator and embrace of communism.

"Their backs are up against the wall as never before," Michael Bustamante, Cuban Studies Chair at the University of Miami, told the AFP news agency.

"They're in the uncomfortable position of making changes to their economic model, seemingly because of the pressure that's being exerted on them by the United States."

The oil blockade imposed by President Donald Trump in January has brought the island's already moribund economy to the brink of collapse, marked by power cuts sometimes lasting over 30 hours and shortages of food, fuel, drinking water and medicine.

Díaz-Canel appeared to anticipate resistance from Communist hardliners.

Some of the reforms "will not have absolute consensus but cannot be postponed," he said.

But "when people's lives become this hard," the government has a responsibility to "change what needs to be changed" rather than try to explain away the crisis, he argued.

It is unclear, however, whether the changes will satisfy Trump, who is pushing for a change in Cuba's leaders as well as its economic model.

The Republican leader has floated a "friendly takeover" of Cuba and joked about making a "stop over" there after ending his war with Iran.

Asked on Thursday if Cuba was now in Trump's sights after he signed a deal to end the Iran war, Vice-President JD Vance said Washington wanted Cubans to be "happy and successful."

"We're actually talking to the Cuban government right now about how they could change their ways to change that."

"If they make smart decisions, we're going to have a much better relationship with that island," he said.

Widespread scepticism

Some of the reforms announced by Cuba were a rehash of earlier proposals, such as granting greater autonomy to state-owned enterprises, which account for roughly 80% of economic activity.

Many disillusioned locals shrugged off the announcements as too little too late, or more state "lies."

"It's a lie, we've been doing this for 67 years and it gets worse every day," Iris, a 58-year-old cleaner, who had been without power at home for 12 hours, seethed.

The country's small but growing business class welcomed the changes, however, while making clear they did not see them as a quick fix.

The reforms "offer hope, a chance that may or may not materialise," said Mario Gonzales, the 32-year-old manager of a restaurant in Havana's historic old town which was thronged with tourists a decade ago and now fills only a handful of tables for dinner.

À surveiller

Perspective IA — des possibilités, pas des certitudes

  • National Assembly will approve proposed economic reforms.

    Très probable · En quelques jours

Questions ouvertes

  • Will reforms be sufficient to avert collapse?
  • Will hardliners resist proposed changes?
  • How will the US respond to Cuban reforms?

Sujets liés

This article was originally published by Euronews News.

Articles liés

Plus sur ce sujetCuba