The list falls under Trump’s executive order from six days ago, which establishes sanctions for those “responsible for repression in Cuba and threats to the national security” of the United States.

14ymedio, Madrid, May 7, 2026 / The State Department named new individuals within the Cuban regime, on Thursday, sanctioned by the United States. They are the powerful Business Administration Group (GAESA); its president, Ania Guillermina Lastres Morera; and the state-owned company associated with the Canadian firm Sherritt International that operates in the Holguín mines, Moa Nickel SA.
In a statement, Secretary of State Marco Rubio explained that he designated these “subjects” under the executive order signed by President Donald Trump on May 1, which determined to impose sanctions “on those responsible for repression in Cuba and threats to U.S. national security and foreign policy.”
Cuba’s military conglomerate Gaesa is on the list, the document states, “for operating or having operated in the financial services sector of the Cuban economy,” and its president, “for being or having been a leader, official, senior executive officer, or member of the board of directors of Gaesa.” As for Moa Nickel, it is sanctioned “for operating or having operated in the metallurgical and mining sector of the Cuban economy.”
This same Thursday, citing Trump’s May 1st order, Sherritt, the international partner of the Cuban state mining company, announced the suspension of its activities on the island and the immediate repatriation of its employees, including the Cubans it employs in Canada.
It is within this context that the stampede of the Canadian Sherritt from the nickel mines in Moa can be explained.
The sanctions, Rubio explained, mean that “all property and interests” of those designated “are blocked” and “must be reported to the Treasury Department’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC).” Any entity or individual, the statement continued, “that is 50% or more owned, directly or indirectly, by them or with other blocked persons, is also blocked.”
Also prohibited are transactions by Americans, within the country or even in transit, involving any property or interest of the sanctioned, unless, continue reading
Similarly, it warns that “foreign individuals who participate in transactions with designated persons” or “who operate in the energy, defense and related materials, metallurgy and mining, financial services, or security sectors of the Cuban economy” risk being “subject to sanctions.” It is within this context that the exodus of the Canadian company Sherritt from the nickel mines in Moa can be explained.
The regime reacted immediately to the new sanctions through its usual channel: the X account of Foreign Minister Bruno Rodríguez. “With the additional collective punishment measures announced today against Cuba, the US government confirms its genocidal intent against the Cuban nation and dispels any doubt about the falsity of its pretexts for attacking our country,” the foreign minister stated, without mentioning any of those sanctioned by name, but attaching an image of the Holguín mining operation.
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