UN Warns Fuel Crisis Pushing Cuba's Health System to Breaking Point

The United Nations warns that severe fuel shortages in Cuba have sparked a humanitarian crisis, crippling the nation's health system. Hospitals face frequent power cuts, shortages of medicine, and an inability to provide critical treatments like chemotherapy and radiotherapy. The crisis also disrupts water delivery for nearly a million people and is causing widespread failures in food supply chains. While the UN is engaging with member states to facilitate aid, operations are limited as dozens of aid containers remain stuck at ports due to the fuel shortage.

Key Points: UN: Cuba Fuel Shortages Trigger Humanitarian Crisis

  • Hospitals face power outages and medicine shortages
  • Cancer patients unable to get radiotherapy or chemotherapy
  • Ambulances and water trucks stalled by lack of fuel
  • Food supply chains are failing across the country
2 min read

UN says fuel shortages push Cuba into humanitarian crisis

UN warns Cuba's fuel crisis cripples hospitals, halts cancer treatments, and disrupts food and water supplies, creating a dire humanitarian emergency.

"We remain deeply concerned about the deteriorating situation, driven by the inability to import fuel. - Stephane Dujarric"

United Nations, March 11

Fuel shortages in Cuba have triggered a humanitarian crisis with the island nation's health system approaching a critical point, a UN spokesman said.

"We remain deeply concerned about the deteriorating situation, driven by the inability to import fuel," said Stephane Dujarric, chief spokesman for UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres.

"This has triggered an energy crisis."

The world body is engaging with member states, including the United States, so aid can be delivered unimpeded, Dujarric said during a briefing on Tuesday.

The UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) said that hospitals face frequent power outages, shortages of essential medicines, the inability to operate critical equipment, as well as major disruptions to oncology care, dialysis, emergency services, infant and maternal care, cold-chain systems, as well as chronic and non-urgent care.

The office said about 16,000 cancer patients need radiotherapy and more than 12,000 depending on chemotherapy cannot get the treatment needed due to power outages and resource shortages. Ambulances are struggling to obtain fuel, delaying urgent care.

OCHA said that nearly one million people depend on water delivered by tanker trucks, which require fuel. More than 80 percent of water-pumping infrastructure relies on electricity, resulting in widespread and prolonged service disruptions, Xinhua news agency reported.

"Food supply chains -- from production to storage to distribution -- are increasingly impacted, with cold-chain systems failing, transport routes increasingly interrupted, and reductions in the availability of basic food items across the country," the office said.

OCHA said its humanitarian partners are working to assist, but the lack of fuel is limiting the operations of food and water trucks, with dozens of aid containers waiting at the port.

The US administration announced last month it was allowing some oil into Cuba, but it can only be sold to the private sector, not to the government. Washington previously banned oil from Venezuela bound for Cuba.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

R
Rahul R
It's a complex geopolitical situation, but basic human needs like medicine and water should be above politics. The US allowing oil only to the private sector seems like a political move, not a humanitarian one. The common people are paying the price.
S
Sarah B
Reading about the ambulances struggling for fuel gave me chills. We in India know how critical a functioning health system is. I hope the UN can broker a solution quickly. Those aid containers sitting at the port are a tragedy.
A
Aman W
This shows how fragile modern infrastructure is. One shortage and everything collapses - hospitals, water, food. India should learn from this and double down on energy security and local supply chains. Jai Hind.
K
Karan T
While the crisis is terrible, one has to ask why Cuba is so dependent on imports for something as basic as fuel? Don't they have any contingency plans? Every country needs a minimum strategic reserve for emergencies, yaar.
M
Meera T
The part about the cold-chain systems failing is a disaster for food and vaccines. We saw during COVID how important that is. My prayers are with the people of Cuba. Hope the world shows more compassion. 🙏

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