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Politics03:00 · 1h ago

Cuban Regime Maintains Control Through Repression Amid Severe Economic Crisis

MakoCenter
Translated & summarized from Mako by baba
The story · English

Cuba is facing a severe economic and social crisis due to intensified U.S. sanctions and embargoes under the Trump administration. The island suffers from unprecedented shortages of food, fuel, and electricity, with power outages lasting up to 30 hours and about three million Cubans lacking running water. Despite these hardships, the Cuban government remains stable, largely due to its extensive internal security apparatus.

The regime suppresses protests and detains demonstrators, with human rights groups estimating over a thousand political prisoners. Cuban intelligence services, established with Soviet KGB and East German Stasi guidance, control nearly all aspects of life. According to a former Cuban agent, there are approximately 140,000 internal security personnel and half a million informants in a country of nine million.

The government monitors citizens through phone surveillance and unofficial curfews, especially in Havana. "Committees for the Defense of the Revolution" operate in thousands of buildings and streets, encouraging citizens to spy on each other and report dissent. Student organizations, controlled by the Communist Party youth movement, oversee educational institutions to prevent exposure to banned books and music and to enforce political participation.

Workplaces are monitored by party-controlled unions and intelligence services, with the threat of dismissal used as a deterrent. The state controls the media, limiting public access to information about protests or opposition activities. Many Cubans who opposed the regime have emigrated to Florida rather than confront the government.

The Trump administration, led by Secretary of State Marco Rubio, has imposed aggressive measures including an oil embargo since January, sanctions on state companies, and indictments against former President Raul Castro. These actions have deepened the humanitarian crisis, affecting hospitals, tourism, and public services. In response, the Cuban government recently approved laws to expand the private sector and attract foreign investment, a significant policy shift aimed at averting total economic collapse.

However, the U.S. State Department dismissed these reforms as insufficient and a "smokescreen," pledging to maintain pressure on Cuba for more substantial changes. The Cuban regime, weakened by the fall of its ally Venezuela's leader Nicolás Maduro, continues to project determination despite mounting challenges.

Read the original at Mako
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