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Fear of ICE can be deadly: The murdered migrants too scared to report abuse

Vanesa Rodríguez Valdés, based in Las Vegas, and her best friend, Liuddibet Calzadilla, in Barcelona, Spain, talked almost daily about their lives and their families back in Cuba, where they were both from. They talked about how much Valdés missed her teenage daughter and the diminutive size of the bedsit in the United States. On Sunday, May 26, Calzadilla wrote to her to ask how she was. She also asked if her husband Roelmer Sánchez Garrido was at home. If he was not, it meant they could talk freely.

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© EL PAÍS

Acá Yaneicy and Vanesa Rodríguez Valdés in Cuba.
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Cuba, in Trump’s hands: ‘The worst thing is trusting a messiah from the outside because we are incapable of saving ourselves’

A horse-drawn carriage in Pinar del Río, Cuba, 2026.

When she first saw the news on Facebook, she thought it had to be one of those hoaxes that circulate on social media. It was too implausible, an absurdity. But shortly afterward the principal of the school where she works forwarded to the teachers’ group chat a message that opened with the classic tone of a war dispatch: Information from the Revolutionary Government. Then she had no doubts. The information was real. The CIA director had just met in Havana with the senior leadership of the Cuban security and intelligence apparatus.

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A line outside a bank in Pinar del Río, 2026.Apagón en el municipio Centro Habana, La Habana, Cuba, en 2026.
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Raúl Castro indictment corners Castroism and shows how far Trump is willing to go in Cuba

Almost at the same time on Wednesday morning, U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio spoke from Washington while Cuba’s president, Miguel Díaz-Canel, spoke from Havana. Both were addressing the people of Cuba. The former highlighted the date, May 20, as the day “the Cuban flag flew for the first time over an independent country” in 1902, an image preserved in a period photograph that forever enshrined the birth of the republic. The latter, however, said that date should be credited for only one thing: “Having planted in Cubans of that era an anti-imperialist sentiment.” Rubio invoked 1902 as an epic moment, but Díaz-Canel asked the people not to forget that May 20 marks the day of U.S. “intervention” and “interference” in Cuba. That has been the narrative between Washington and Havana to this day: two governments wrestling over the meaning of history.

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© Yamil Lage (AP)

Raúl Castro in Santiago de Cuba, April 10, 2019.
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‘It’s hell’: migrant women suffer constant abuse in ICE centers

One day in April, Diana Mogollón arrived at a place of which she knew almost nothing. She felt frustrated, sad, and did not want anyone to come near her to talk. At that point she was the newcomer among all the detained migrant women, until at night she saw a young woman come in, looking very young and quiet, with a protruding belly that her clothes could not hide. “She came in and sat to one side; the room was very full.” There were about 70 women inside, sleeping on mats with barely any space, under unsettling lights that stayed on 24 hours a day. Mogollón felt sorry for the young woman. “I told her: girl, if you want, sit on this side because they won’t trample you there.” They began to get to know each other, to tell each other their lives.

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Detention of a woman by immigration agents, in New York.

© KLAUS GALIANO

A migrant woman leaves her hearing at Federal Plaza Courthouse in New York, in October 2025.
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