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El mundo es un poco mejor desde que aparecieron Los Beatles: la saga ‘Anthology’ nos lo recuerda

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Sucede una vez más. Después de la edición Anthology (1995), que contenía la combinación de una nueva canción (“Free as a bird”) + grabaciones inéditas + documental definitivo + libro canónico que parecía el legado definitivo de Los Beatles, la monumental serie documental Get Back (Peter Jackson, 2021) potenció la leyenda de la banda de que puso patas para arriba al mundo en los años 60 del siglo XX. Le siguió “Now and then”, la “última canción”. Pero no era todo.

30 años después de su primera entrega, la saga Anthology continúa y ha llegado este fin de 2025 en forma de documental recargado, estrenado en Disney + con un nuevo episodio. El capítulo 9 se suma a los 8 del estreno original y contiene algo así como un “detrás de la escena” de la reunión de los tres beatles vivos entre 1993 y 1995, cuando grabaron “Free as a bird” y las entrevistas que nutrieron el proyecto. Este nuevo episodio culmina con la inclusión de “Now and Then”, el último single de la banda, completado en 2023 a partir de un demo de John Lennon.

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1995: George Martin, Paul, Ringo y George escuchan las cintas originales para el proyecto «Anthology»

En este capítulo hay una perla narrativa en esta historia. George Harrison relata una anécdota reveladora del clima de época, sobre las largas jornadas en Abbey Road: “Algunas de las personas aquí —el ingeniero, por ejemplo— siempre intentaban irse a casa a las 17:30 (5:30 p.m.)”, comenta con ironía. “Y nosotros estábamos intentando hacer historia”, agrega con esa sutil ironía marca registrada que tenía. Para mantener el ritmo, el asistente Mal Evans preparaba té con un toquecito de anfetaminas para el equipo, y Ringo añade: “George [Martin] aún no ha bajado desde aquel momento”.

Anthology es una magnífica visión integral de la evolución de Los Beatles, desde (casi) el punk rock de Hamburgo hasta la liberación de locura creativa inigualada y posiblemente inalcanzable de sus últimos años. En un momento del documental, George Harrison y Ringo Starr bromean sobre la tendencia de Paul McCartney a apurar a la banda para entrar al estudio, a lo que el aludido responde: “Yo era el adicto al trabajo. Me gustan los Beatles. Me gusta trabajar con los Beatles. No me avergüenzo de eso. Es lo que amo en la vida”. Ese entusiasmo y dedicación, potenciadas por un descomunal talento, es lo que se percibe en cada pista de Anthology 4.

La complicidad y el humor
La complicidad y el humor de Los Beatles se reflejan en grabaciones espontáneas

Porque más allá de las imágenes y el impacto de ver a George Harrison, Paul McCartney y Ringo Starr juntos, tirados en el pasto o tocando canciones country para divertirse, está la música. De eso se trata esta nota: Anthology 4, el cuarto disco de la colección vuelve a ofrecer una ventana a la intimidad creativa de la banda. Por ejemplo, en una toma inédita de seis minutos de “Baby You’re a Rich Man”, grabada en mayo de 1967 en Abbey Road. “Queremos unas Cocas, Mal” pide John Lennon. Y Paul McCartney agregan con humor: “¡Y si tienes algo de resina de cannabis!”. La atmósfera distendida se refleja en la broma: “Esto lo tenemos grabado para el Tribunal Superior de mañana”, en alusión a la reciente redada de drogas que había involucrado en ese otoño de 1967, a la plana mayor de los Rolling Stones: Mick Jagger, Keith Richards, Brian Jones y una corte de extraños personajes. La grabación captura la energía y complicidad del grupo en un momento de plenitud creativa.

Anthology 4 reúne trece tomas inéditas, principalmente del periodo 1964-1965, donde se puede escuchar a la banda trabajando en canciones como “Tell Me Why”, “Nowhere Man” y “Every Little Thing”. Además, incorpora veintitrés pistas provenientes de ediciones de archivo de la última y creativa (pese a la tensión interna latente) etapa, entre ellas versiones alternativas de “Got To Get You Into My Life”, “Here Comes the Sun” y “Don’t Let Me Down”.

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Es así. El corazón de Anthology 4 reside en el material nunca antes publicado. Destaca una primera toma de “In My Life”, donde John Lennon explora la canción en voz alta, acompañado por la armonía de Paul y la batería de Ringo, en una interpretación vulnerable y sincera. En “I’ve Just Seen A Face”, la banda exhibe su faceta más lúdica, con John bromeando sobre el músico Lonnie Donegan (N. de la R: músico británico conocido como “el Rey del Skiffle”, el subgénero con el que arrancaron Los Beatles). “Lonnie se va a arrepentir de no haber cantado esta”. Las risas y la complicidad atraviesan el álbum, que ofrece una de las mayores concentraciones de momentos espontáneos y humorísticos de la discografía del grupo.

"Anthology 4" entrega nuevos descubrimientos
«Anthology 4» entrega nuevos descubrimientos para los fans de Los Beatles

Entre las rarezas incluidas también figura una toma temprana de “This Boy”, conocida solo por quienes poseían el single “Free As a Bird”. Al inicio, John exclama: “Quita este maldito micrófono del medio”, antes de lanzarse a una interpretación intensa y emotiva. A pesar de que Lennon menospreció la canción en años posteriores, la grabación revela la profundidad emocional que alcanzó en el estudio. Otras sesiones, como la de “Every Little Thing”, muestran el ambiente relajado de las grabaciones, con Paul confesando: “Eructé”, mientras que el ensayo para la BBC de “All You Need Is Love” incluye una narración cómica sobre la reina Margarita.

La colección también recupera momentos en los que Ringo Starr brilla, como en su interpretación de “Matchbox”, y ofrece una versión más animada de “I Need You”, de George Harrison, donde la banda se burla amistosamente de él. Como siempre, Harrison persevera y mantiene la compostura. El vínculo entre esta grabación y canciones posteriores como “Isn’t It A Pity” o “Behind that Locked Door”, resulta evidente para los oyentes atentos.

Uno de los pasajes más conmovedores de Anthology 4 es la sesión de la bella “If I Fell”, grabada en febrero de 1964, poco después de la histórica aparición en The Ed Sullivan Show. En esta toma, John Lennon suena serie e introspectivo, mientras Ringo Starr sostiene el ritmo y Paul McCartney aporta armonías que realzan la intensidad de la interpretación. La grabación original genera un pequeño milagro: redescubrir una canción familiar para millones de personas alrededor del mundo a lo largo de 60 años, pero bajo una luz completamente nueva. Ese pequeño instante de felicidad vale por sí solo para recordarte que el planeta Tierra y la vida de los seres humanos es un poco mejor desde que aparecieron Los Beatles.

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[Fotos: prensa Disney]



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‘It’s hidden’: Female genital mutilation and the secret shame of Minnesota’s Somalis

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More than half a million women and girls in the United States are living with the physical and psychological scars of female genital mutilation — including many in Minnesota, home to a large Somali community from a country where roughly 98% of women have undergone the procedure, according to United Nations data.

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Yet despite a state law that makes performing the procedures a felony, Minnesota has never secured a single criminal prosecution under its law — raising questions about enforcement, and whether cases could be going on undetected.

Female genital mutilation, or FGM, involves the cutting or removal of parts of a female’s genital organs, typically for cultural rather than medical reasons. The practice is irreversible.

«It’s hidden — it’s a cultural practice, and who is doing the cutting could be a family member or a doctor who is also in that same culture,» Minnesota Republican state Rep. Mary Franson told Fox News Digital, noting it may be carried out within tight-knit communities. She said the secrecy surrounding the practice makes it exceptionally difficult to detect and confront.

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MINNESOTA ‘ON THE CLOCK’ AS HHS THREATENS PENALTIES OVER CHILDCARE FRAUD SCANDAL

Razor blades often used before carrying out female genital mutilation. (REUTERS/James Akena)

For some within Minnesota’s Somali community, the issue is less about public crime statistics and more about private silence — a practice survivors say is carried in secrecy, shame and fear.

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The lack of prosecutions comes amid broader scrutiny of how Minnesota agencies handle oversight failures, including high-profile welfare and daycare fraud cases in which prosecutors allege billions of taxpayer dollars were siphoned off while warning signs went unaddressed. Investigators and watchdogs later concluded that officials were reluctant to probe deeply in culturally sensitive contexts — a reluctance, critics say, allowed large-scale violations to persist in plain sight.

The estimate of more than half a million survivors in the United States comes from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s most recent national analysis, published in 2016.

Together, the scale of the issue and the difficulty of detection have raised questions about whether Minnesota’s ban on FGM is being effectively enforced when the crime is often carried out in secrecy.

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Ayaan Hirsi Ali headshot

Ayaan Hirsi Ali, a Somali-born activist and author who survived FGM, recalled the harm the practice has had on her and the need for accountability. ((Photo by Leonardo Cendamo/Getty Images))

Survivor warns of lasting harm

Ayaan Hirsi Ali, a Somali-born activist and author who survived FGM, described the lasting physical and psychological damage she endured and called for legal accountability.

«Female genital mutilation is violence against the most vulnerable — children,» Hirsi Ali told Fox News Digital. «It causes infection, incontinence, unbearable pain during childbirth and deep physical and emotional scars that never heal. Religious or cultural practices that deliberately and cruelly harm children must be confronted. No tradition can ever justify torture.»

Hirsi Ali, who founded the AHA Foundation as a means to end FGM, said that the pressure placed on parents in these groups to enforce the practice poses an overwhelming risk to girls.

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«Only legal accountability can help reduce that risk,» Hirsi Ali said. «I survived female genital mutilation and I carry its scars with me. But I refuse to accept that another girl in America must endure what I did in Somalia.»

‘I remember being held down’

Zahra Abdalla, a Minnesota-based Somali survivor of female genital mutilation, told Fox News Digital that the practice survives in secrecy, shielded by family pressure and silence.

Abdalla, who spoke to Fox News Digital on camera but asked that her face be blurred, said she was between six and seven years old when she was forcibly restrained in a refugee camp in Kenya while adult women in her community carried out the procedure without anesthesia, using a razor blade.

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«They tied my hands and my legs,» Abdalla said. «I remember being held down. I remember the pain — and knowing I could not escape.»

Abdalla said she was «lucky» because she fought back during the procedure, kicking one of the women who was pregnant at the time. The disruption, she said, caused the cutting to stop before it was fully completed. She said the wound was later washed with salt water. 

«That pain — I thought I was going to pass out,» she said.

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Medical instruments, gloves and cotton used in medicalised female genital mutilation procedures.

Tools used to perform medicalized female genital mutilation (FGM) procedures are displayed in Kisii, Kenya in 2023. (Simon Maina/AFP)

The damage followed her into adulthood, she said, later requiring surgery and, in her view, contributing to multiple miscarriages. She also said intercourse was very difficult. 

She said the practice is often driven by marriage expectations, adding that in some communities men are reluctant to marry women who have not undergone the procedure.

«It’s tied to dowry. It’s tied to marriage,» she said, referring to the financial and social expectations placed on families when arranging marriages. «It’s tied to what men expect,» she said. «Families believe it protects a girl’s value.»

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She said silence remains one of the biggest barriers to enforcement. She is the executive director of the nonprofit Somaliweyn Relief Agency (SRA), which seeks to raise awareness about the practice.

«You don’t talk about it,» she said. «You’re told to stay quiet.»

While she said she cannot confirm specific cases inside Minnesota, she said she believes some families take girls back to Somalia during school breaks to have the procedure performed.

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No prosecutions despite felony law

Her warning mirrors how some of the only known U.S. cases have surfaced.

In a high-profile federal case in Michigan in 2017, prosecutors alleged that two young girls were taken from Minnesota to undergo female genital mutilation. The case later collapsed because the judge ruled that Congress did not clearly have the constitutional authority, at the time, which expanded federal jurisdiction in cases involving interstate or international travel.

That ruling prompted Congress to strengthen the statute, a change signed into law by President Donald Trump in 2021 under the Stop FGM Act, which expanded federal jurisdiction in cases involving interstate or international travel.

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Two women wearing traditional Muslim clothing walking on a sidewalk in Minneapolis.

Women wearing traditional Muslim clothing walk along a sidewalk in Minneapolis. The city is home to a large Muslim population. (Michael Dorgan/Fox News Digital) (Michael Dorgan/Fox News Digital)

However, a Fox News Digital review of publicly available Minnesota court records, enforcement announcements and professional licensing disciplinary records found no documented prosecutions or sanctions tied to FGM. The Minnesota Attorney General’s Office said prosecutions for state crimes like female genital mutilation are handled by county attorneys and did not identify any FGM cases. County prosecutors contacted for this story also did not identify any prosecutions.

Those provisions, however, have not resulted in documented criminal prosecutions.

Minnesota criminalized female genital mutilation in 1994, classifying the practice as a felony.

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The Minnesota Department of Health told Fox News Digital that it does not track specific data on female genital mutilation, underscoring how difficult the practice is to monitor or enforce.

Global context, local uncertainty

Around the world, FGM is most prevalent in parts of Africa and the Middle East.

Somalia has among the highest prevalence rates in the world, with United Nations data estimating roughly 98% of women ages 15 to 49 there have undergone the procedure. The United Nations, World Health Organization and UNICEF classify FGM as a human rights violation rooted in efforts to control female sexuality and enforce gender inequality, and the UN observes an annual day of awareness in February to combat the practice globally.

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Those figures describe conditions in Somalia and are not proof the procedure is occurring in Minnesota, but they help explain why risk is acknowledged even as the practice remains difficult to detect.

Medical experts say the procedure can cause chronic pain, severe bleeding, infections, urinary problems, sexual dysfunction, childbirth complications and, in some cases, death. Because it permanently alters genital tissue, the harm cannot be undone. Survivors often require repeated medical care and carry lasting psychological trauma.

Critics say the gap between the law and enforcement is fueled by silence. 

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Survivors often do not report the practice out of fear, stigma, family pressure or concern about involving authorities — even when mandatory reporting laws exist. Medical professionals, particularly OB-GYNs, are often the first to encounter adult survivors, placing clinicians near the center of any enforcement effort that has yet to materialize.

MINNESOTA FRAUD WHISTLEBLOWER SAYS ‘LACK OF GUARDRAILS WAS PRETTY SHOCKING’

The CDC has not released a newer national estimate, and there is no data on the number of people in Minnesota who are victims. However, a CDC-supported Women’s Health Needs Study conducted from 2019 to 2021 included Minneapolis as one of four U.S. metro areas documenting a significant survivor population.

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The study did not track where procedures occurred or whether anyone was charged, underscoring how little the public knows about enforcement.

Fox News Digital also contacted multiple Minnesota clinics that provide reproductive and women’s health services asking whether clinicians encounter patients with physical evidence of female genital mutilation. None responded.

President Donald Trump

The AHA Foundation said it is pushing for President Donald Trump to sign an executive order to make combating female genital mutilation a national priority. (Tasos Katopodis/Getty Images)

Lawmakers push task force amid accountability questions

Some Minnesota state lawmakers have introduced legislation this session to establish a «task force on prevention of female genital mutilation» — a step that Rep. Mary Franson said reflects concerns raised by women in the community that the practice may be occurring or going undetected in Minnesota.

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Franson said the legislation was prompted by concerns raised by women in the Somali community. The bill’s chief author is Rep. Huldah Momanyi-Hiltsley, a Democrat of Kenyan heritage, and it is co-sponsored by Franson along with Democratic Reps. Kristin Bahner, Kristi Pursell and Anquam Mahamoud, who is Somali-American. None of them responded to multiple Fox News Digital requests for comment. 

Franson said she became a focal point of opposition once she became publicly associated with the bill.

«The bill was brought forward by women in the Somali community. I was the chief author, but then Democrats told one of the DFL women that if I carried the bill, they would not support it,» Franson said. «Of course, it’s because they believe I am a racist.»

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Franson, who is white, first introduced FGM-related legislation in 2017 that would have classified the practice as child abuse and clarified parental accountability. That effort stalled and never became law.

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At the federal level, Congress criminalized female genital mutilation in 1996 and later expanded federal jurisdiction in 2018 under legislation signed by then-President Donald Trump, explicitly covering cases involving interstate or international travel.

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Even so, prosecutions nationwide have remained rare, with the only widely cited state-level conviction occurring in Georgia in 2006, where a woman was convicted under Georgia state law for performing FGM on a minor.

In Minnesota, where the practice has been a felony since 1994, there is no public record of a single criminal prosecution — raising an unavoidable question: with laws on the books and a documented survivor population, who is responsible for enforcing the ban, and why have prosecutions not followed?

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Who is El Mencho? Inside the rise of CJNG’s fallen kingpin and the cartel he built

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Ruben «Nemesio» Oseguera Cervantes, known as «El Mencho,» the powerful leader of the Mexican Jalisco New Generation Cartel (CJNG) who rose to prominence after the fall of Joaquin «El Chapo» Guzman, the former head of the rival Sinaloa Cartel, was killed Sunday in a Mexican military operation, authorities said.

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Under Oseguera’s leadership, CJNG expanded aggressively across Mexico, battling Sinaloa for control of key trafficking corridors into the United States and cementing its status as one of the world’s most formidable drug trafficking organizations.

His death marks the fall of one of the most influential and elusive cartel bosses of the post–El Chapo era, long viewed by U.S. and Mexican officials as a central architect of fentanyl and methamphetamine trafficking.

Deputy Secretary of State Christopher Landau said he had been informed that Mexican security forces killed Oseguera, calling it a significant victory.

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MEXICO FLIES 37 CARTEL MEMBERS TO US UNDER PRESSURE FROM TRUMP ADMIN

El Mencho was killed during a Mexican operation in Jalisco on Sunday. (Drug Enforcement Administration)

«I’ve just been informed that Mexican security forces have killed ‘El Mencho,’ one of the bloodiest and most ruthless drug kingpins,» Landau wrote on X. «This is a great development for Mexico, the U.S., Latin America and the world. The good guys are stronger than the bad guys.»

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A senior State Department official separately confirmed Oseguera’s death and referred to Landau’s remarks.

The State Department issued a travel alert Sunday for multiple areas of Mexico, urging U.S. citizens to shelter in place due to «ongoing security operations and related road blockages and criminal activity,» including parts of Jalisco, Tamaulipas, Michoacan, Guerrero and Nuevo León.

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Charred Bus Mexico

A soldier stands guard by a charred vehicle after it was set on fire, in Cointzio, Michoacán state, Mexico, Sunday, Feb. 22, 2026, following the death of the leader of the Jalisco New Generation Cartel, Nemesio Oseguera, known as «El Mencho.»  (Armando Solis/AP Photo)

Oseguera, a former police officer, helped found CJNG around 2009 after splintering from the Sinaloa Cartel. In the years that followed, the group evolved from a regional faction into one of the most dominant trafficking networks in the world.

U.S. authorities steadily increased the reward for information leading to his capture, at one point offering up to $15 million, placing him among the most wanted fugitives globally.

Former U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration official Paul Craine once described Oseguera as «public enemy No. 1» and said he commanded an «army of thousands.»

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BARBARIC KILLINGS, AMPUTATIONS, RUTHLESS EXTORTION: THE ALARMING RISE OF MEXICO’S JALISCO NEW GENERATION

DEA Atlanta cartel bust

The Drug Enforcement Administration in Atlanta seized more over 1,000 pounds of meth linked to the violent ‘Cartel Jalisco New Generation.’ (Fox News)

Authorities have linked him to coordinated attacks on Mexican security forces, including a 2015 assault in Jalisco in which cartel gunmen used rocket-propelled grenades to bring down a military helicopter.

Over time, CJNG gained a reputation for projecting strength through public displays of force and social media messaging, reinforcing its position as one of Mexico’s most feared criminal organizations.

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His death removes one of the most dominant figures in Mexico’s criminal underworld and could reshape the balance of power among rival cartels.

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Rusia concluyó la repatriación de 4.300 turistas varados en Cuba por la crisis energética

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Turistas pasean en un auto clásico este viernes, en una calle de La Habana (Cuba)
EFE/ Ernesto Mastrascusa

Las aerolíneas rusas dieron por concluida el domingo la operación de repatriación de casi 4.300 turistas varados en Cuba, víctimas de una crisis energética que ha dejado a la isla sin combustible de aviación y sin capacidad de sostener el turismo que constituye una de sus escasas fuentes de divisas. El último vuelo, operado por la compañía Rossía del Grupo Aeroflot, aterrizó a las 17.27 en el aeropuerto moscovita de Sheremétievo procedente del balneario de Varadero, popular destino vacacional entre los ciudadanos rusos. El Ministerio de Transporte ruso confirmó el cierre de la operación en un comunicado publicado en Telegram.

En total, nueve vuelos rescataron a turistas rusos repartidos en Varadero, La Habana, Holguín y Cayo Coco desde que la campaña de repatriación arrancó el 13 de febrero. El propio día del vuelo final, el aeropuerto de Sheremétievo tuvo que limitar sus operaciones a causa de los ataques de drones ucranianos, circunstancia que añadió una capa adicional de complejidad logística al operativo. El ministerio señaló que la posibilidad de reanudar los vuelos comerciales quedará supeditada a “la normalización de la situación con los suministros de queroseno” en la isla.

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La suspensión de las conexiones aéreas rusas con Cuba se anunció a principios de mes, cuando las aerolíneas Rossiya y Nordwind notificaron la imposibilidad de abastecerse de combustible en los principales aeropuertos cubanos. Rusia había recomendado el 11 de febrero a los operadores turísticos que cesaran la venta de viajes a la isla. Antes que Moscú, Canadá —el mayor emisor de turistas a Cuba— completó el viernes la repatriación de cerca de 28.000 ciudadanos, tras la suspensión temporal de Air Canada y otras aerolíneas canadienses por idéntica razón. Con 131.000 viajeros en 2025, Rusia era la segunda fuente de turistas extranjeros para La Habana.

Turistas dan un paseo en
Turistas dan un paseo en un auto estadounidense clásico en La Habana, el lunes 26 de enero de 2026
(AP Foto/Ramon Espinosa)

La raíz de la crisis es una combinación de factores estructurales e inmediatos. El embargo estadounidense, vigente desde 1962, sumó en enero de 2026 un nuevo capítulo cuando la administración de Donald Trump amenazó con imponer aranceles a cualquier país que suministrara petróleo a Cuba. La medida llegó poco después de la captura de Nicolás Maduro en Venezuela, que hasta entonces era el principal proveedor de crudo de La Habana. México, que había compensado parcialmente esa caída, también suspendió los envíos bajo la presión de Washington. Según la consultora Kpler, Cuba atraviesa su primer período sin llegada de crudo extranjero desde 2015.

El resultado ha sido devastador para la infraestructura energética de la isla. Seis de las 16 unidades termoeléctricas se encuentran fuera de servicio, y durante febrero Cuba registró apagones diarios con afectaciones de entre 1.362 y 1.779 megavatios, sin ninguna jornada en que menos del 41% del país quedara sin electricidad en las horas pico. Provincias como Camagüey, Holguín y Matanzas acumularon cortes superiores a 20 horas diarias, con repercusiones directas sobre hospitales, sistemas de refrigeración de medicamentos y el suministro de agua potable.

El sector turístico, segunda fuente de divisas del país con más de 300.000 empleos directos, ha recibido un golpe especialmente severo. La falta de combustible para aerolíneas internacionales ha reducido drásticamente esa cifra, mientras la dictadura cubana anunció el cierre temporal de unos 30 hoteles de baja ocupación en La Habana y Varadero como medida de ahorro energético.

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19/02/2026 El presidente ruso, Vladimir
19/02/2026 El presidente ruso, Vladimir Putin, recibe en Moscú al ministro de Exteriores de Cuba, Bruno Rodríguez
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MINISTERIO DE EXTERIORES RUSO EN X

La diplomacia cubana buscó esta semana el respaldo de Moscú. El ministro de Exteriores de Cuba, Bruno Rodríguez, viajó a la capital rusa y se reunió con el presidente Vladímir Putin y el canciller Serguéi Lavrov. Putin se limitó a señalar, al inicio del encuentro, que Moscú no acepta situaciones como la actual, sin ofrecer detalles. El portavoz del Kremlin, Dmitri Peskov, confirmó que se abordó la “ayuda concreta” que Rusia podría prestar a La Habana “en las condiciones actuales”. Lavrov y Rodríguez también llamaron conjuntamente a Washington a renunciar a sus planes de bloqueo naval a Cuba.

El Kremlin anunció que estudia reanudar el suministro de petróleo a la isla, algo que no ocurre desde el envío de 100.000 toneladas de crudo en febrero de 2025. Sin embargo, las dificultades son considerables: cualquier país que exporte crudo a Cuba se expone a represalias comerciales de Estados Unidos, un factor disuasorio que ha dejado a La Habana sin aliados energéticos efectivos. El experto cubano Jorge Piñón, especialista del Instituto de Energía de la Universidad de Texas, advirtió a EFE que Cuba podría afrontar una “grave crisis” en seis u ocho semanas si no recibe nuevos cargamentos de petróleo. La retirada de los turistas rusos y canadienses no hace sino anticipar ese horizonte.

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