Cuba pays tribute to 32 soldiers killed in US attack on Venezuela

Cuba has paid tribute to 32 of its soldiers who were killed in a United States attack on Venezuela earlier this month that led to the abduction of President Nicolas Maduro.

The remains of the soldiers, who were members of Cuba’s armed forces and intelligence agencies, arrived early on Thursday at Havana’s international airport, in coffins draped in the Cuban flag.

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President Miguel Diaz-Canel and Raul Castro, the 94-year-old retired former Cuban leader, were present in full military uniform to receive the remains.

Diaz-Canel hailed the soldiers earlier this week, saying they “heroically fell in defence of the sovereignty of a sister nation”.

At Thursday’s event, Interior Minister General Lazaro Alberto Alvarez also expressed the country’s gratitude for the soldiers he said had “fought to the last bullet” during the US military’s January 3 attack on the Venezuelan capital, Caracas.

“We do not receive them with resignation; we do so with profound pride,” said Alvarez, adding that the US “will never be able to buy the dignity of the Cuban people”.

Cubans pay their respects during the funeral honors of the 32 Cuban soldiers who died during the US incursion to capture Venezuelan leader Nicolas Maduro, at the Ministry of the Revolutionary Armed Forces in Havana on January 15, 2026.
Cubans pay their respects to the slain soldiers at the Ministry of the Revolutionary Armed Forces in Havana on January 15, 2026 [AFP]

A motorcade later transferred the remains to the armed forces ministry along one of Havana’s main boulevards, lined by thousands of people paying their respects, waving flags and saluting.

Residents of the capital also lined up to pay their respects at the ministry throughout the day.

US President Donald Trump has rejected international criticism that the raid to capture Maduro violated international law, stressing last week that he will only be guided by his “own morality”.

That led to soaring tensions around the world, including in Latin America in particular, which has a long history of US military intervention.

Tensions between the US and Cuba spiralled this week after Trump told the country he would cut off Venezuelan oil and money from reaching the island, warning Havana to make a deal before it’s “too late”.

Havana
A motorcade in Havana transports the Cuban‑flag‑draped urns of soldiers killed in the US strike in Caracas. [Norlys Perez/Reuters]

Trump’s comments prompted a defiant response from Diaz-Canel, who said Cuba would defend its homeland “to the last drop of blood”.

“We have always been willing to maintain serious and responsible dialogue with the various US administrations, including the current one, on the basis of sovereign equality, mutual respect and the principles of international law,” the Cuban president said.

He added that relations between the US and Cuba should be based on international law rather than “hostility, threats, and economic coercion”.

Meanwhile, a rally is also planned on Friday in front of the US embassy in Havana to protest the Trump administration’s operation in Venezuela.

Maduro, who was abducted by US forces alongside his wife, Cilia Flores, is being held in the US on drug-related charges, which he denies.

TOPSHOT - Cubans protect themselves from the rain wearing umbrellas as they queue outside the Ministry of the Revolutionary Armed Forces to pay their respects to the 32 Cuban soldiers who died during the US incursion to capture Venezuelan leader Nicolas Maduro, during the funeral honors in Havana on January 15, 2026.
Cubans protect themselves from the rain wearing umbrellas as they queue outside the Ministry of the Revolutionary Armed Forces to pay their respects to the 32 Cuban soldiers who died during the US incursion to capture Venezuelan leader Nicolas Maduro, during the funeral honours in Havana on January 15, 2026 [Yamil Lage/AFP]

UN chief’s last annual speech slams world leaders for lack of cooperation

United Nations chief Antonio Guterres has lashed out at world leaders he accused of turning their backs on international cooperation amid “self-defeating geopolitical divides” and “brazen violations of international law”.

Addressing the UN General Assembly on Thursday, the UN secretary-general slammed “wholesale cuts in development and humanitarian aid”, warning that they were “shaking the foundations of global cooperation and testing the resilience of multilateralism itself”.

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“At a time when we need international cooperation the most, we seem to be the least inclined to use it and invest in it. Some seek to put international cooperation on deathwatch,” he said.

Last annual speech

The secretary-general, who will step down at the end of 2026, held off naming offending countries, but appeared to refer to deep cuts to the budgets of UN agencies made by the United States under the “America First” policies of US President Donald Trump.

While other countries have also cut funding, the US announced at the end of last year that it would be allocating only $2bn to United Nations humanitarian assistance, representing a small fraction of the leading funder’s previous contributions of up to $17bn.

Trump’s administration has effectively dismantled its primary platform for foreign aid, the US Agency for International Development (USAID), calling on UN agencies to “adapt, shrink or die”.

Setting out his last annual list of priorities as secretary-general for the year ahead, Guterres said the UN was “totally committed in the cause of peace in Gaza, Ukraine, Sudan and far beyond and tireless in delivering life-saving aid to those so desperate for support”.

The UN chief insisted humanitarian aid be allowed to “flow unimpeded” into Gaza, said no effort should be spared to stop the Russia-Ukraine war, and urged a resumption of talks to bring about a lasting ceasefire in Sudan.

Those three deadly, protracted conflicts have come to define Guterres’s time at the helm of the UN, with critics arguing the organisation has proved ineffective at conflict prevention.

The UK is taking political prisoners to evade accountability for genocide

In June 2025, the UK government proscribed the UK-based group Palestine Action as a terrorist organisation under the Terrorism Act 2000. This was not a security decision, but a political one, marking an unprecedented escalation in the criminalisation of Palestine solidarity in the United Kingdom. Palestine Action members have engaged in non-violent direct action aimed at disrupting the UK’s complicity in the Gaza genocide, targeting facilities linked to Israel’s arms industry operating in the UK, including Elbit Systems sites and elements of British military infrastructure.

Rather than confronting its own actions, the government has sought to divert attention from the central issue: the UK’s role in the Gaza genocide. Throughout Israel’s assault on Gaza, the UK has provided sustained political and diplomatic support, supplied vital components for F-35 fighter jets, and conducted R1 surveillance flights over Gaza. Taken together, these actions render the British government not merely complicit, but materially involved in the violence itself.

At the same time, the UK has sought to obstruct international accountability. It has attempted to interfere with proceedings at the International Criminal Court — conduct that may constitute an offence under Article 70(1) of the ICC Statute — by intimidating the ICC Prosecutor and creating procedural obstacles designed to delay or prevent the issuance of arrest warrants against Israeli leaders. Rather than reassessing policies that expose it to legal and moral liability, the government has turned on those who insist on holding it to its own professed values — values it readily invokes when geopolitically convenient, such as in Ukraine and Greenland.

Anti-terror laws to justify political imprisonment

The persecution of individuals on political grounds through the law is by no means new. As early as 399 BCE, Socrates was tried and executed in Athens on charges of “impiety”, “not recognising the gods the state recognises”, and “corrupting the youth”, with the law itself serving as the instrument of repression.

Today, Russia’s crackdown on dissent, carried out through formally lawful means, stands as one of the most widely criticised contemporary examples of political imprisonment, routinely condemned by Western governments, including the UK.

Attempts to define and legally operationalise the concept of political imprisonment have long faced resistance. While there is no consensus on what constitutes a “political prisoner” or “prisoner of conscience”, the criteria established by the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE), of which the UK is a member, offer clear and authoritative guidance:

“a. if the detention has been imposed in violation of one of the fundamental guarantees set out in the European Convention on Human Rights and its Protocols (ECHR), in particular freedom of thought, conscience and religion, freedom of expression and information, freedom of assembly and association; 

b. if the detention has been imposed for purely political reasons without connection to any offence; 

c. if, for political motives, the length of the detention or its conditions are clearly out of proportion to the offence the person has been found guilty of or is suspected of;

d. if, for political motives, he or she is detained in a discriminatory manner as compared to other persons; or, 

e. if the detention is the result of proceedings which were clearly unfair and this appears to be connected with political motives of the authorities.”  (SG/Inf(2001)34, paragraph 10).
These criteria are directly relevant to the UK’s treatment of Palestine Action. The British government is complicit in Israel’s systematic unmaking of Palestine, including its illegal occupation, its system of apartheid, and its role in the Gaza genocide, and Palestine Action has directly challenged this complicity. Where public order and civil disobedience laws once failed to suppress this activism, the state escalated to the use of exceptional anti-terror legislation.

The government has since resorted to the Terrorism Act to preemptively criminalise activists and expose them to sentences of up to 14 years’ imprisonment, a level of punishment grossly disproportionate to non-violent direct action. This disproportionality and choice of legislation signal a political motive.

The application of the Terrorism Act 2000 to non-violent direct action strips activists of ordinary legal protections and subjects them to an exceptional penal regime, including extended pre-charge detention, heightened surveillance powers, restrictions on association and expression, and dramatically increased sentencing exposure. Such measures are ordinarily reserved for acts involving mass violence, not protest aimed at preventing harm.

Under the PACE criteria, detention may be considered political where punishment is clearly disproportionate or where legal proceedings are unfair and politically motivated. Here, non-violent activism is met with the prospect of lengthy imprisonment alongside reputational destruction through terrorist designation. This combination satisfies multiple indicators of political imprisonment, particularly criteria (c) and (e).

The use of anti-terror law in this context does not merely criminalise conduct; it redefines dissent itself as a security threat, preempting fair adjudication and conditioning the public to accept extraordinary punishment for ordinary political opposition.

The broader picture

In penology, a penal system may serve several recognised purposes, including just deserts and retribution, incapacitation, and deterrence. What is unfolding in the UK fits none of these aims. Instead, the penal system is being deployed to expand executive power and suppress political opposition, deviating from the purposes a penal system in a liberal democracy should serve.

The UK is complicit in grave violations of international law and has not only failed to meet its international legal obligations, but has actively breached them. Some British citizens, concerned with justice, international law, and human rights, have peacefully stepped in to challenge their government’s wrongdoing. The state’s response has been to criminalise dissent while presenting repression as democratic self-defence.

Let us be clear: proscribing Palestine Action as a terrorist organisation is not an isolated act. It is part of the UK’s broader complicity in Israel’s oppression and genocide, and it functions domestically to silence those who seek to disrupt that complicity.

This is not the first attempt to rule by law in the UK to support Israel’s policies in Palestine. The introduction of the IHRA definition of anti-Semitism was another such attempt to control and intimidate opposition through legal means. With the weaponisation of anti-terror laws, the UK government has taken a further step towards shrinking the space for dissent.

The exceptional selectivity of legal tools and the disproportionality of the chosen penal regime cannot be justified when measured against the conduct in question: non-violent activism aimed at compelling the government to halt violence and uphold the international legal obligations it claims to champion. Those participating in violence are branding the non-violent as terrorists.

Finally, it is striking that after all these decades, the UK continues to ignore its unique historical responsibility towards the Palestinians. The UK imposed its mandate over Palestine by force, governing the territory while systematically privileging colonial and settler interests, before abandoning its obligations and withdrawing unilaterally. This withdrawal was crucial to creating the conditions in which the Nakba unfolded, in breach of the responsibilities the UK had assumed under the Mandate.

Among those obligations was the commitment articulated in the White Paper of 1939 to establish a Palestinian state for all its citizens within 10 years, a promise that was never honoured. The UK planted the seeds of Palestinian suffering and then exited Palestine without securing political self-determination for its indigenous people, leaving a legacy of dispossession that continues to shape the present.

More than a century after the Mandate, it remains Palestinians — supported by allies across the world — who are risking everything to defend the values of humanity and the principles of international law. The British state, by contrast, has chosen evasion over responsibility, and repression over reckoning.

Any hopes?

Hope lies in refusing the normalisation of this moment. By challenging the proscription of Palestine Action, activists are not only resisting the UK’s complicity in Israel’s crimes, but defending the space for dissent itself. The struggle is not simply to reverse one decision, but to prevent the erosion of democratic limits through the misuse of law. In the UK right now, defending democracy and acting against complicity in Israeli atrocities go hand in hand.

US sanctions Khamenei aide, other Iranian officials over protest crackdown

The United States has imposed new sanctions against Iran, targeting political and security officials over the crackdown on antigovernment protesters, amid US President Donald Trump’s threats to intervene militarily against the country.

The US penalties on Tuesday targeted Ali Larijani, the secretary of Iran’s Supreme National Security Council (SNSC), and several other officials, who it said were the “architects” of Tehran’s “brutal” response to the demonstrations.

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“The United States stands firmly behind the Iranian people in their call for freedom and justice,” US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said in a statement.

“At the direction of President Trump, the Treasury Department is sanctioning key Iranian leaders involved in the brutal crackdown against the Iranian people. Treasury will use every tool to target those behind the regime’s tyrannical oppression of human rights.”

The sanctions freeze the individuals’ assets in the US and make it illegal for American citizens to do business with them.

With Iran already under heavy sanctions, the measures are largely symbolic, but they signal mounting US pressure against Iran amid the protests. Larijani is a close adviser to Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

Earlier this week, after Trump called on Iranians to “take over” public institutions and “save the names of the killers and abusers”, Larijani was quick to respond, accusing Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of killing Iranians.

“We declare the names of the main killers of the people of Iran: 1- Trump 2- Netanyahu,” he wrote on X.

Thousands of protesters are believed to have been killed in the wave of demonstrations that gripped Iran since the start of the year, according to several activist groups.

The Iranian government has described the demonstrators as armed rioters, egged on by the US and Israel to spread chaos, saying that more than 100 security officers have been killed by armed attacks during the demonstrations.

Al Jazeera is not able to independently verify these figures.

Authorities have also imposed an internet blackout on the country, making it difficult to verify the death toll as well as claims from both sides.

On Tuesday, Israel’s Channel 14, which is aligned with Netanyahu, reported that “foreign actors” are arming protesters in Iran to target government personnel.

After Trump escalated his rhetoric for days, a US attack on Iran appeared imminent late on Thursday.

Iran shut down its airspace; several Israeli towns opened their bomb shelters; and the US withdrew some personnel from the region.

Iran had threatened a severe response against any US attack.

But as the world held its breath in anticipation of the strikes, Trump softened his position, saying that he had been told that the killing of protesters had stopped.

“They [Iranian officials] said people were shooting at them with guns, and they were shooting back,” Trump said. “And you know, it’s one of those things, but they told me that there will be no executions, and so I hope that’s true.”

He reiterated that message on Thursday, saying that it is “good news” that Iran will not be executing protesters.

In June, Israel attacked Iran without provocation, killing dozens of top military officials and nuclear scientists, as well as hundreds of civilians.

Trump has said he was “very much in charge” of the Israeli onslaught, which culminated in the US bombing Iran’s main nuclear facilities before a ceasefire was reached.

Before the protests erupted in Iran, Trump last threatened to bomb the country again if it rebuilds its nuclear or missile programmes as he hosted Netanyahu in the US state of Florida.

The US is also intensifying its economic sanctions against Iran with the aim of choking Tehran’s oil sales.