Published On 22 Nov 2025
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Published On 22 Nov 2025

A senior UN official claims that the United States must lift unilateral sanctions against Cuba because they are “causing significant effects across all aspects of life” more than 60 years after they were put in place during the first half of Fidel Castro’s presidency.
The island nation’s “extensive regime of economic, trade, and financial restrictions” against them is the longest-running unilateral sanctions policy in American history, according to Alena Douhan, special rapporteur on the negative effects of unilateral coercive measures on human rights.
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Cuba’s government has argued that the country “will not surrender” to Washington’s “policy of collective punishment,” but only the US Congress has the authority to lift the Cold War-era embargo on the communist-run nation.
In a statement released on Friday, Douhan stated that “generations of Cubans have lived under unilateral coercive measures, which have shaped the country’s economic and social landscape.
According to the UN official, Washington’s measures have gradually increased since 2018, with additional sanctions being imposed on the already-existing ones, and that there will be significant increases in 2021 as a result of Cuba’s re-designation as a “state sponsor of terrorism.”
Other nations and foreign businesses also abide by the embargoes in an effort to avoid being targeted by secondary sanctions, which, according to Douhan, “suffocate the social fabric of Cuban society” and affect the ability of the people to plan for long-term growth.
US governments have ignored international demands for decades to lift the sanctions against Cuba, such as the overwhelmingly popular UN General Assembly vote at the end of October, which demonstrated widespread support for a 33rd-year embargo.
The country is further strained by a growing emigration of skilled workers, including doctors, engineers, and teachers, according to the UN rapporteur, who claims there are shortages of food, medicine, water, essential machinery, spare parts, and supplies.
According to Douhan, the cumulative effect has “severe consequences for the enjoyment of human rights, including those relating to life, food, health, and development.”
The island of 10 million has been harmed by a number of power outages and grid collapses over the past year.
The UN expert noted that investors are cautious about investing in long-term projects because Washington may have changed its mind about its policies even though the US has very limited licenses and exemptions.
She urged all states to uphold international law principles and standards and to follow international law principles that are rooted in the values of reciprocity, solidarity, cooperation, and multilateralism.



Published On 22 Nov 2025
The FAA’s NOTAM (Notice to Airmen) warning was issued on Friday, citing the “worsening security situation and heightened military activity in or around Venezuela,” and noting that it was skipping a flight over the nation.
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Due to the threats “at all altitudes, including during overflight, the arrival and departure phases of flight, and/or airports and aircraft on the ground,” the aviation regulator urged aircraft flying in the area to “exercise caution.”
According to the FAA, there has been more global navigation satellite system interference in Venezuelan airspace since September, which has “loosely caused lingering effects throughout a flight” and “activity associated with increasing Venezuela military readiness”.
The FAA noted that “Venezuela has at no point expressed an intention to target civil aviation” and that it has conducted numerous military exercises and directed the mass mobilization of thousands of military and reserve forces since September.
The FAA will continue to monitor the risk environment for US-based civil aviation in the area and make adjustments as necessary, it continued.
According to the Reuters news agency, US airlines operated direct flights to Venezuela in 2019 without using passenger or cargo carriers, despite the report that some do so on flights there.
American Airlines announced on Friday that it had suspended its October flights to Venezuela. United Airlines and Delta Air Lines did not respond to requests for comment right away.
In response to Washington’s alleged military operation against Latin American drug trafficking cartels, it has deployed its most advanced aircraft carrier strike group, navy warships with thousands of troops, and F-35 stealth aircraft to the area.
As the Trump administration intensifies its rhetoric against Caracas, including by accusing Maduro of drug trafficking, Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro has warned that Washington may try to overthrow him as a result of the military buildup.
In addition, US forces are currently attacking ships in the Caribbean Sea and the eastern Pacific Ocean. More than 80 people have died in US attacks on more than 20 vessels since early September, which the US claims are involved in drug trafficking.
Legal experts accuse the Trump administration of conducting extrajudicial killings in international waters, but the US military has not provided any proof that the vessels and their occupants were engaged in criminal activity or had posed a threat to the US.
According to Flightradar24, US flight operators are now required to give the FAA 72 hours prior notice before entering Venezuelan airspace.
Due to increased military drills and GNSS interference in Venezuela, the US FAA has issued a new security NOTAM to warn operators of potential risks to civil aviation. https://t.co/5YkzqGHziy pic. twitter.com/bBuEQTLsiz

As President Gustavo Petro continues to defend his innocence in the wake of allegations from the administration of US President Donald Trump about his complicity in the drug trade, Colombian authorities have seize 14 tonnes of cocaine from its main Pacific port.
Bolivia, the country’s largest cocaine-producing nation, announced that the US Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) would be invited back into the country in 2017 to support the new conservative government’s efforts against cocaine.
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The Ministry of Defense of Colombia praised the “historic blow” to drug traffickers on Friday when it announced the scavenging of dozens of 50-kilogram (110-pound) sacks of cocaine inside a warehouse in Buenaventura, a strategic port for Colombian cocaine.
The container was headed for the Netherlands, according to the statement, adding that “the drug was camouflaged under the method of being mixed with plaster.”
“With this seizure, we prevented the distribution of 35 million cocaine doses and had a significant financial impact on those structures,” the statement read.
Petro confirmed the seizure in a post on X, calling it the largest seizure by Colombian police “in the last ten years” when he videoed officers and canines raiding a warehouse in the Port of Buenaventura.
He continued, “There was no single death during the operation.”
¡ALERTA!
Colombia’s largest police incautación in the last decade.
Son 14 cocaine toneladas without a solo muerto in Buenaventura’s Puerto. pic. twitter.com/KlCPPfRbWa
ALERT! Colombia’s police have recently conducted the largest seizure. In the Port of Buenaventura, 14 tons of cocaine have been seized without a single fatality.
The Trump administration has increased its clampdown on Bogota over the past few months, calling its anti-drug policies ineffective, and threatening to have Colombia off its list of allies in its drug war.
President Petro, his wife Veronica del Socorro Alcocer Garcia, his son Nicolas Fernando Petro Burgos, and Colombian Interior Minister Armando Alberto Benedetti were given sanctions by the US Department of the Treasury in October for their alleged involvement in the world drug trade.
Petro “allowed drug cartels to prosper and refused to stop this activity,” according to Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent.
Since President Gustavo Petro took office, cocaine production in Colombia has soared to the highest level in decades, inflicting flooding and poisoning Americans, according to Bessent.
Petro demanded on Monday that Colombia’s Financial Information and Analysis Unit make his bank records  public, to show that he has no connections to drug trafficking.
Do you find it alarming that the president was democratically elected by Colombians in your eyes? On X, Petro wrote.
Petro has criticized Trump’s anti-drug policies since taking office, calling them “extrajudicial executions” for the repeated bombings of suspected traffickers in the Caribbean and the eastern Pacific Ocean since September.
The Trump administration has used its military actions to combat illicit drug flows, including a recent surge in the number of warships stationed in the area.
As Caracas grows concern that Trump is preparing troops for an upcoming military conflict against Venezuela, Venezuela has decried it as a pretext to remove President Nicolas Maduro from office.
US ties to Bolivia are improving as Colombia and Venezuela continue to face off against each other as they approach Washington in a new era of conservative rule.
Ernesto Justiniano, Bolivia’s brand-new narcotics tsar, announced to the AFP news agency on Friday that the socialist former president Evo Morales had been invited to reappear.
According to Justiniano, who is a member of the new administration of President Rodrigo Paz, a pro-business conservative who took office on November 8, “there is a political commitment” for the organization to return to Bolivia, where cocaine production has allegedly gotten out of hand.
“We will no longer be a country that acts solely out of political necessity,” Justiniano declared.
He continued, “International cooperation is essential” in the fight against the drug trade.