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Cuba vows to defend against 'terrorists and mercenaries'

On Thursday, President Miguel Diaz Canel stated that Cuba will defend itself from "terrorists and mercenaries aggression." This came a day after Havana announced that it had killed four exiles on board a speedboat registered in Florida that entered Cuban water and opened fire at a patrol.

Cuban officials said that the Cubans on the speedboat involved in the incident of Wednesday were anti-government Cubans. Some had been wanted before for plotting an attack. Cuba claims that six people were injured on the speedboat.

"Cuba neither attacks nor threatens," Diaz-Canel said on X. "We have said this repeatedly and reaffirm it today: Cuba will be able to defend itself with firmness and determination."

The incident occurred at a?time of heightened tensions between the United States and Cuba, who have blocked?oil deliveries to the island? in order to pressure the Communist government after they captured and imprisoned Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro.

Fuel shortages are affecting transport, and power cuts have worsened on the Caribbean’s largest island where the grid is dependent on imported oil. Venezuela was Cuba's largest oil supplier but it hasn't sent any shipments since December.

U.N. warned of a humanitarian disaster if Cuba's needs for energy are not met.

Russia, one of Cuba's last oil suppliers (though it hasn't given a specific date for the next shipment), called for restraint and called the incident "an aggressive provocation from the United States".

Marco Rubio, the U.S. secretary of state, said that his government would independently investigate this incident.

He told reporters that "we're still collecting facts." "We do not make decisions in the United States based on what Cuban officials say." (Reporting and writing by Anett Rios, Editing by Sarah Morland & Alistair Bell; Writing by Gabriel Araujo)

(source: Reuters)