
-
Fire destroys stage at Belgian electro festival
-
Trump slams own supporters as Epstein row grows
-
October execution date set for Texas man in 'shaken baby' case
-
Goldman Sachs profits jump as CEO eyes more merger activity
-
Trump slams 'stupid' Republicans as Epstein row grows
-
EU unveils bigger long-term budget but risks fight with farmers
-
Gaza aid point crush kills 20 people
-
Yamal takes iconic Barcelona number 10 shirt
-
Trump says not firing Fed chair -- but not ruling out
-
Markets fall on reported Trump plan to fire Fed chief
-
Argentina under Milei: a tale of two economies
-
Real Madrid's Bellingham set to miss 12 weeks after shoulder surgery
-
UK's Starmer suspends several Labour rebels
-
Heat melts Alps snow and glaciers, leaving water shortage
-
EU unveils blueprint for boosted 2-trillion-euro budget
-
Abrahamsen wins Tour de France stage as Pogacar survives scare
-
Modric at AC Milan to 'stay competitive and in Europe' at 40
-
20 people killed in aid point crush in southern Gaza
-
Sweden flying under Euros radar ahead of England clash, says Asllani
-
Decathlon world record holder Kevin Mayer sits out 2025 season
-
Iceland volcano erupts for ninth time since 2023
-
Parish confirms Palace will appeal over Europa League demotion
-
'Serious questions' over UK secret Afghan relocations: PM
-
Chelsea keeper Petrovic joins Bournemouth
-
Real Madrid confirm Vazquez departure
-
British Open could return to Trump's Turnberry
-
Ukraine's wartime reshuffle: what we know
-
No magic fix: 'Harry Potter' stars banned from driving
-
Israel bombs Syria army HQ after warning Damascus to leave Druze alone
-
'Incredible' Stokes put body on line for England: Root
-
Stocks steady as traders weigh inflation data, trade deal
-
Liverpool eye blockbuster bid for Newcastle's Isak: reports
-
Italy sorts vast piles of post for popular Pope Leo
-
Stellantis pulls plug on hydrogen fuel cell vans
-
Nvidia's Huang says 'doing our best' to serve Chinese market
-
Man irked by Japan go-karting noise arrested for attempted arson
-
Global health aid sinks to 15-year low in 'era of austerity'
-
German Wellbrock wins world 10km swim after water quality delay
-
Markets mixed as traders weigh trade deal, US inflation data
-
Indonesian shoemakers fear Trump tariffs despite lower levy
-
Indonesia hails 'new era' with US after Trump trade pact
-
Wallabies get Valetini fitness boost ahead of Lions Test
-
Pakistan's quiet solar rush puts pressure on national grid
-
Thai ex-PM Thaksin appears on stand in royal defamation case
-
Dutch tech giant ASML sees profits rise but warns on 2026
-
Tajikistan's apricot farmers grapple with climate change
-
Silver says NBA to study possible expansion beyond 30 teams
-
Schwarber's homer hat-trick lifts NL over AL in MLB All-Star Game
-
British Open: Five contenders to watch
-
McIlroy returns to Portrush as Schauffele defends British Open crown

Cuban minister resigns after downplaying poverty
The labor minister in economically depressed Cuba resigned Tuesday amid an uproar over her claim that people rummaging through garbage cans were only pretending to be poor and not truly desperate.
Such scenes of acute need are common in Cuba, especially in Havana, as people in the communist run country grapple with runaway inflation, meager wages and food shortages, causing some to resort to panhandling or eating out of the trash.
The labor minister who denied this, Marta Elena Feito, who also oversees the social security system, "acknowledged her mistake and tendered her resignation," Cuban state media said Tuesday, adding that she had shown a "lack of objectivity and sensitivity."
On Monday, Feito told a parliamentary committee meeting about measures to address poverty that people rummaging for food in garbage bins are in fact dressed up to look like beggars.
"When you look at their hands, when you look at the clothes those people are wearing, they are disguised as beggars. They are not beggars. In Cuba, there are no beggars," she said in statements broadcast live on state television.
Social media users in the communist nation reacted with outrage, posting photos of people eating out of trash cans, while economist Pedro Monreal commented on X that there are "people disguised as 'ministers'" in Cuba.
President Miguel Diaz-Canel entered the fray on X Tuesday to lambast Feito's "lack of sensitivity."
He later told a parliamentary session that "none of us can act with arrogance, act with pretense, disconnected from the realities we live in."
Beggars, added Diaz-Canel, are "concrete expressions of social inequalities and the problems" Cuba faces.
Poverty levels have increased sharply as the Caribbean country reckons with its worst economic crisis in three decades, marked by shortages of food, medicine and fuel and daily power blackouts.
Observers blame a combination of US sanctions, domestic mismanagement of the economy, and the Covid-19 pandemic tanking the nation's vital tourist industry.
Last year, the government said there were 189,000 families and 350,000 individuals out of a population of 9.7 million living in "vulnerable" conditions and benefiting from social assistance programs.
AFP has observed a marked increase in the last two years of homeless people and beggars on the streets of a country where the average monthly salary is less than $20 at the unofficial exchange rate.
Cuba's economy shrunk for the second consecutive year in 2024, contracting 1.1 percent compared to 1.9 percent in 2023.
L.Hussein--SF-PST