Cuban nurses in Havana before leaving to assist in Trinidad and Tobago during the COVID-19 pandemic in May 2020. Photo: Cuba News Agency Prime Minister Stuart Young SC has addressed the issue of Cuban healthcare workers in Trinidad and Tobago, saying the programme will continue as Trinidad and Tobago is not in violation of any practices that the US has outlined.
Speaking at a post-Cabinet media at Whitehall on Thursday after returning from a meeting in Jamaica with US Secretary of State Marco Rubio, Young said the topic did not arise during their discussions, however he said Trinidad and Tobago is in adherence with best practices regarding the contractual engagements of Cuban medical workers in the country, and this information will be relayed to the US. “It did not feature in our bilateral conversation. We had had certain conversations prior to my bilateral meeting with Secretary of State Rubio and just today at Cabinet I instructed the Minister of Foreign and CARICOM Affairs to work along with the Minister of Health to get our position to the United States. “In the development of the policy, and everyone trying to understand what the United States was referring to, a number of concerns that they had, that certain things, if they were not done, would fulfil what they were describing, human trafficking [and so on], and Trinidad and Tobago has ticked every single box, so I was happy to see that…I’ve asked today…let us send our information to the United States because we certainly don’t fall in the categories of their concern at all.” In response to questions as to whether the programme would continue, Young responded: “The answer is yes, we’ll continue with it.” Regarding allegations made by a former minister that the salaries of Cuban healthcare workers were going back to Cuba instead of directly to them, Young said this may have been the case under the previous government but it is not the case currently. “That may have happened under his tenure but it certainly isn’t happening under our tenure…we actually help the Cuban medical practitioners that are contracted within Trinidad and Tobago… set up their own personal bank accounts here in Trinidad and Tobago, and that is where the government pays their salaries. “I also can tell you that we provide passage for them to come and at the end of their contract, to leave, we provide for vacation in between, we don’t have anything to do with their passports, they hold on to their passports, we provide housing. Their terms and conditions are determined by the Chief Personnel Officer under this government.” Young said based on a briefing document provided to him there are approximately 87 nurses and nine medical doctors. In February, US Secretary of State Marco Rubio issued a statement announcing the expansion of an existing Cuba-related visa restriction policy “that targets forced labour linked to the Cuban labour export program”, with a focus on Cuba’s overseas medical missions. CARICOM heads of government spoke out in defence of the programme, emphasising its role in enhancing the delivery of healthcare within the region as well as the fair treatment of Cuban healthcare workers. (source: The Loop, March 27, 2025)
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