Aid flotilla arrives in Cuba as US oil blockade bites

Published March 25, 2026
Activists greet residents after a ship arrived at the port of Havana from Mexico with humanitarian aid for Cuba.—AFP
Activists greet residents after a ship arrived at the port of Havana from Mexico with humanitarian aid for Cuba.—AFP

HAVANA: The first boat of a flotilla carrying medical supplies, food and solar panels reached Cuba on Tuesday to aid the island as a US fuel blockade deepens its energy crisis.

The Maguro shrimp fishing boat docked in Havana three days later than hoped after battling strong winds, currents and a pesky battery during its journey from Mexico.

As they approached Havana’s colonial-era fortification, the international activists stood on the cabin roof of the boat — symbolically renamed “Granma 2.0” as a tribute to the yacht used by Fidel Castro’s guerrilla fighters to launch their revolution in 1956.

They held a sign reading “Let Cuba live” while others waiting for them on the dock chanted “Cuba yes! Blockade no!” “I wish everyone would unite, even Cubans abroad, and come and do the same because it is the people who are suffering,” said Amado Rodriguez, a 59-year-old driver walking near Havana Bay.

The first shipments arrived by plane from Europe, Latin America and the United States last week as part of an air and sea mission, dubbed Our America Convoy, to bring some 50 tonnes of aid to Cuba. Two more ships were due to arrive Tuesday or Wednesday.

Activists say the mission, which had the support of the government, aims to bring relief to Cubans amid a de facto US oil blockade that President Donald Trump launched in January.

Critics have slammed the effort as benefiting the communist government more than ordinary people. Convoy organiser David Adler, a US citizen, said the mission brought urgently needed aid directly to Cubans and showed the world “the human costs of Trump’s siege on Cuba.” “It demonstrated that international solidarity can triumph over forced isolation,” said Adler, coordinator of global left-wing group Progressive International.

Cuba has suffered seven nationwide blackouts since 2024 — two of them this past week — due to aging thermoelectric plants and oil shortages.

The situation has deteriorated since Cuba’s chief regional ally, Venezuelan socialist leader Nicolas Maduro, was captured by US forces in January and Trump threatened tariffs against countries that ship oil to the island.

The Sea Horse, a Hong Kong-flagged tanker that was previously reported to be taking Russian diesel to Cuba, ended up in Venezuelan waters, data from maritime tracker Kpler showed on Tuesday.

Trump’s ‘greed’

The Maguro left from Mexico’s Yucatan peninsula Friday carrying 32 people, including activists from Australia, Brazil, Ecuador, Italy, Mexico and the United States, and journalists. As the boat motored across the sea, Brazilian activist Thiago Avila said other nations should come to Cuba’s aid.

“We cannot allow the world and international law to be buried under the greed of Donald Trump,” Avila said.

Published in Dawn, March 25th, 2026

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