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Aid sailboats arrive in Cuba days after going missing en route from Mexico
WELCOME: Activists with an international organisation disembark from sailboats carrying humanitarian aid that departed from Mexico disembark in the port in Havana, Cuba

TWO SAILBOATS that went missing carrying humanitarian aid from southern Mexico to Cuba landed in Havana on Saturday afternoon after Mexico’s navy said it had located the boats days after they went incommunicado because of bad weather.

The Nuestra America Convoy aid vessels, carrying at least eight people, departed from Isla Mujeres in southern Mexico on March 20 and then lost contact, fuelling concern in Mexico, Cuba and beyond.

In a post on social media on Saturday morning, the navy said an aircraft spotted the boats 80 nautical miles north-west of Havana.

Upon arriving to the island, Adnaan Stumo, the co-ordinator of the sailing convoy, said bad weather was responsible for the delay because the boats had to take a longer route and the sailors were “never in any serious danger.”

He thanked Mexico’s navy, which escorted one of the boats into Havana Bay, for its support and making sure they were OK, and said they were “delighted” to start delivering aid to Cubans on the island.

“We arrive with a simple but powerful message: solidarity with the Cuban people doesn’t stop at borders. It crosses oceans,” Mr Stumo, a US citizen, said.

“Over the past week, our sailboats encountered difficult conditions at sea, during which we lost contact with convoy co-ordinators and maritime authorities alike.”

James Schneider, communications director for Progressive International who helped co-ordinate the Nuestra America convoy to Cuba, thanked Mexican and Cuban authorities for their help on Saturday and said he was “relieved” to hear they were safe.

“The crews are safe, and the vessels are continuing their journey to Havana,” he said Saturday morning. “The convoy remains on track to complete its mission — delivering urgently needed humanitarian aid to the Cuban people.”

The boat’s arrival comes as an increasing number of countries and aid organisations have sent shipments of aid to Cuba while a US fuel blockade has caused crippling blackouts and pushed the Caribbean nation to the brink of collapse.

US President Donald Trump in a speech Friday said “Cuba is next” after speaking about military actions in Venezuela and Iran.

The fuel blockade has prompted United Nations leaders to warn of a potential “humanitarian crisis” in the island’s future amid mounting concerns by human rights and religious leaders as hospitals, schools and many residents go without power for long stretches.

The same day the boat was located, a delegation of religious leaders also arrived in Cuba. They visited hospitals and a nursing home, and met with other religious leaders on the island.

“Immense suffering is being caused to the people,” said the Reverend Philip Vinod Peacock, general secretary of the World Communion of Reformed Churches.

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