Cuba’s top court has sentenced former Economy Minister Alejandro Gil to life in prison for espionage following a closed-door trial, in one of the country’s highest-profile cases in decades.
In a statement on Monday, the Supreme Popular Tribunal said Gil also received a second concurrent prison sentence of 20 years on corruption charges.
Recommended Stories
list of 4 itemsend of list
These include bribery, falsification of documents and tax evasion.
Gil, who served as economy minister from 2018 to 2024, was once a close confidant of President Miguel Diaz-Canel.
The 61-year-old politician was sacked in February 2024 and had not been seen or heard from until the trials.
The court did not give details about what exactly the former minister did or who he was spying for.
It said Gil had engaged in “corrupt and deceitful actions” and that he had abused the powers of his office “to obtain personal benefits”. It also said he received money from foreign companies and bribed other public officials to legalise the acquisition of assets.
“He failed to follow work procedures with the classified official information he handled, he stole it, damaged it, and finally made it available to the enemy,” it added.
Gil has the right to appeal the sentence within 10 days.
The former minister’s case is the highest profile among officials who have fallen from grace since 2009, when then-Vice President Carlos Lage and Foreign Minister Felipe Perez Roque were dismissed.
Their case involved leaks of sensitive information, although they were not sentenced.
Gil was the public face of monetary and financial reforms in 2021 in Cuba, including trying to unify the country’s currency system. But Cuba, already affected by an economic crisis and shortage of some products, saw an inflationary spiral.
Source: Aljazeera

Leave a Reply