Intensified Cuba Sanctions Regime: Blackouts, Hospital Shutdowns, and Collective Punishment

The systematically intensified US sanctions regime against Cuba has caused 20-hour blackouts, hospital closures, medication shortages for 5 million chronically ill people, and collapse of essential services. UN experts condemned the measures as collective punishment of civilians.

Beyond the January 2026 oil embargo, the broader US sanctions regime against Cuba has been systematically tightened since January 2025, causing 20-hour blackouts, hospital shutdowns, medication shortages affecting 5 million people with chronic illnesses, and collapse of basic services including water, sanitation, and public transport. UN human rights experts condemned the measures as likely amounting to collective punishment of civilians, with fuel imports cut by approximately 90 percent.

Executive summary

What this record documents

  • US sanctions have cut Cuba's fuel imports by approximately 90 percent as of February 2026, causing electrical grid collapse with blackouts lasting up to 20 hours in Havana and longer in provinces.
  • Cuba's Health Minister reports 5 million people with chronic illnesses face medication or treatment disruption, including 16,000 cancer patients needing radiotherapy and 12,400 undergoing chemotherapy.
  • UN human rights experts condemned the measures, warning they 'may amount to the collective punishment of civilians' and called the January 2026 executive order a violation of international human rights law.
  • Hospitals forced to suspend operations due to fuel shortages for generators, food shortages worsened, water scarcity spread, garbage collection collapsed causing dengue and chikungunya outbreaks.
  • The sanctions regime goes beyond the January 2026 oil embargo to include tariff threats against any country selling oil to Cuba, effectively creating a secondary sanctions blockade.

Timeline

Sequence of events

  1. New administration begins tightening Cuba sanctions

    The Trump administration takes office and begins systematically intensifying the US sanctions regime against Cuba, building on existing restrictions.

  2. Blackouts and fuel shortages intensify across Cuba

    Cuba experiences worsening blackouts of up to 20 hours as fuel supplies dwindle under tightened sanctions. Hospitals begin suspending operations due to generator fuel shortages.

  3. Executive order declares national emergency, threatens oil-exporting countries

    Trump issues executive order declaring a purported national emergency and authorizing tariffs on imports of oil from any third country selling to Cuba, effectively creating a secondary sanctions blockade.

  4. Cuba's Health Minister warns of healthcare collapse

    Cuba's Health Minister reports that the healthcare system is being 'pushed to the brink,' with 5 million chronically ill patients affected, including thousands of cancer patients whose treatments face disruption.

  5. UN human rights experts condemn fuel blockade

    UN human rights experts formally condemn the executive order, warning that measures causing shortages of essential goods may amount to the collective punishment of civilians.

  6. Foreign Policy reports full-scale humanitarian crisis

    Foreign Policy publishes a comprehensive report documenting the humanitarian crisis caused by US policy: 90% fuel import reduction, 20-hour blackouts, hospital shutdowns, food and water shortages, and disease outbreaks.

Analysis

Reporting, legal context, and impact

What Happened

Since January 2025, the Trump administration has systematically intensified the US sanctions regime against Cuba, building on decades of existing restrictions to create what multiple international observers describe as a full-scale humanitarian catastrophe. The escalation culminated in a January 29, 2026 executive order declaring a national emergency and threatening tariffs against any country that sells oil to Cuba, effectively cutting off Cuba's ability to import fuel from any source.

The consequences have been devastating for Cuba's civilian population of 11.3 million.

Energy and Infrastructure Collapse

US sanctions have reduced Cuba's fuel imports by approximately 90 percent as of February 2026. The result is near-total electrical grid collapse:

  • Blackouts last up to 20 hours in Havana, with even longer outages in the provinces.
  • Hospitals are forced to suspend operations when generator fuel runs out.
  • Water pumping stations fail, causing water scarcity across the island.
  • Public transportation has largely ceased to function.
  • Garbage collection has collapsed, leading to dengue and chikungunya outbreaks.

Healthcare Crisis

Cuba's Health Minister has warned that the healthcare system is "being pushed to the brink." Specific impacts include:

  • 5 million people living with chronic illnesses face disruption to their medications or treatments.
  • 16,000 cancer patients requiring radiotherapy face treatment interruption.
  • 12,400 chemotherapy patients face treatment disruption.
  • Hospitals suspend operations due to power outages and lack of medical supplies.
  • Refrigeration failures destroy temperature-sensitive medications and blood supplies.

UN Condemnation

In February 2026, UN human rights experts formally condemned the executive order imposing the fuel blockade, warning that "measures which are likely to result in shortages of essential goods may amount to the collective punishment of civilians." The experts stated that "interfering with fuel imports could lead to a severe humanitarian crisis with knock-on effects for essential services."

Legal Analysis

The humanitarian impact of the sanctions regime raises serious concerns under international law:

Collective punishment: The UN experts' assessment that the sanctions may amount to collective punishment of civilians invokes principles from the Geneva Conventions and international human rights law. Collective punishment — imposing suffering on an entire population for the actions of its government — is prohibited under Additional Protocol I, Article 33, and is widely considered a violation of customary international humanitarian law.

Right to health: The ICESCR Article 12 guarantees the right to the highest attainable standard of health. Sanctions that demonstrably cause hospital closures, medication shortages, and treatment interruptions for millions constitute a serious interference with this right.

Right to adequate living standard: The ICESCR Article 11 and UDHR Article 25 guarantee rights to food, water, and basic services. The documented food shortages, water scarcity, and sanitation collapse caused by fuel deprivation directly violate these rights.

Relationship to Existing Cuba Embargo Entry

This incident focuses on the broader sanctions regime and its humanitarian consequences — particularly the UN's collective punishment assessment, the healthcare crisis, and the secondary sanctions threatening any oil-exporting country. It is related to but distinct from the January 2026 oil embargo executive order documented in the Cuba Oil Embargo entry, which focuses specifically on the post-Maduro oil cutoff.

Why This Is Classified Severe

  • Civilian population impact: 11.3 million people affected by an infrastructure collapse directly attributable to sanctions policy.
  • Healthcare catastrophe: 5 million chronically ill people losing access to treatment, including cancer patients.
  • UN collective punishment finding: The UN's assessment that the measures may constitute collective punishment is a grave determination.
  • Systematic and deliberate: The sanctions are acknowledged policy actions, not accidents or unintended consequences.
  • Secondary sanctions escalation: Threatening tariffs against any country selling oil to Cuba extends the impact beyond bilateral US-Cuba relations to a global blockade.

International Law Violations

  1. Geneva Conventions Additional Protocol I, Article 54: Prohibition on destroying objects indispensable to civilian survival. Cutting off fuel that powers hospitals, water treatment, and food refrigeration has an analogous effect.
  2. ICESCR Article 12: Right to health. Sanctions causing hospital shutdowns and medication shortages for millions violate this right.
  3. ICESCR Article 11: Right to adequate living standard. Food shortages, water scarcity, and sanitation collapse caused by fuel deprivation.
  4. UDHR Article 25: Right to health, food, and necessary social services.
  5. UN Charter: Unilateral coercive measures causing humanitarian harm without Security Council authorization.

Linked reporting

Reporting and secondary sources

Related records

Read this record in context