Cuba distributes donated milk from Mexico, Uruguay
Cuba is distributing donated powdered milk from Mexico and Uruguay to young children, pregnant women, and pediatric facilities due to severe shortages. This temporary relief highlights the island's ongoing economic crisis and dependence on imports, worsened by U.S. sanctions and the pandemic.
Cuba has started distributing donated powdered milk from Mexico and Uruguay to families and hospitals as the island grapples with worsening shortages and an economic crisis. The government says priority will go to young children, pregnant women, and pediatric facilities, where milk supplies have nearly run out.
The donations come after months of protests over food and medicine shortages, made worse by U.S. sanctions, falling tourism, and failed domestic policies. Cuba imports most of its food, and the pandemic choked off remittances and tourism dollars. Milk production has dropped sharply, hitting babies and new mothers hardest. Local dairy farms struggle with feed shortages, fuel costs, and aging equipment, making it hard to meet demand even before the current crisis.
The first shipments arrived last week and will be distributed through state-run stores and hospitals. Officials say more donations from Venezuela and Panama are expected, but the amounts remain unclear. The government has also started rationing basics like flour and cooking oil, signaling deeper cuts ahead.
This relief is temporary. Long-term solutions depend on easing sanctions, stabilizing the economy, or major reforms. Without them, Cubaโs most vulnerable will keep facing empty shelves and empty bottles. The milk donations are a bandage, not a cureโbut theyโre a lifeline for now.

