Tuesday, April 7, 2026

Cubans take to the streets on bikes to voice their opposition to US sanctions

Q24N (Reuters) Cuban activists paraded on Thursday ​on bikes and electric tricycles along Havana’s waterfront Malecon ‌boulevard, accompanied by Cuban President Miguel Diaz-Canel, in a show of defiance amid U.S. efforts to starve the island of fuel.

Participants in the government-organized ​caravan rode past the U.S. Embassy in the Cuban capital, ​their electric and pedal-powered vehicles displaying flags and banners ⁠attacking the sanctions imposed on the country by President Donald Trump’s ​administration.

The rally came a day after Cuba’s top diplomat in Washington ​publicly invited the U.S. government to help overhaul Cuba’s crippled economy as part of ongoing negotiations that have yet to yield results.

Participants in the rally ​said they favored talks with the United States but demanded respect ​for Cuba.
“I believe that genuine dialogue between both governments is possible, but international ‌law ⁠and our country’s autonomy must be respected,” said Sheila Ibatao, a Havana law student and participant.
Diaz-Canel did not speak during the event.

The Cuban government often organizes large rallies at the U.S. Embassy. ​This caravan was ​smaller and more ⁠discreet, hampered by fuel shortages that have crippled mobility and hobbled public transportation.

A Russian-flagged tankership arrived ​in Cuba this week and off-loaded 700,000 barrels ​of crude ⁠oil, promising some relief in the coming weeks.

The Trump administration, which has threatened to slap tariffs on countries that export oil to ⁠Cuba ​and explicitly prohibited imports of Russian oil, ​said it allowed the Russian-flagged tanker to dock in Cuba’s Matanzas port for humanitarian ​reasons.

Reporting by Ayose Naranjo; Editing by Dave Sherwood and Will Dunham. Read the original at Reuters.com

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