HAVANA: A choke on US aid threatens to smother media exposing abuses in Cuba, Nicaragua and Venezuela, to the unconcealed delight of the very leaders Washington once wanted held accountable.
It was one of President Donald Trump’s first acts on his return to the White House: curbing the US Agency for International Development (USAID) and other bodies that fund humanitarian and democratization projects. And, while a judge has since ruled the action was probably unconstitutional, a dark cloud hangs over aid projects, including some $268 million budgeted for “independent media” in 30 countries in 2025, according to Reporters Without Borders (RSF).
Dozens of Latin American outlets have cut staff. Some have closed altogether. At the same time, the Trump administration has dismantled state-run American media with a global audience, such as Radio Y Television Marty—founded in Florida in the 1980s to counter the Cuban Communist Party’s monopoly on information—and the Voice of America.
“It is regrettable that what had been one of the most reliable partners for the independent media sector and Cuban civil society has decided to so freely give the authoritarians cause for celebration,” Jose Nieves, editor of the Miami-based Cuban news portal El Toque told AFP of the US retreat. “As we are seeing these days, the dictatorships in the region openly organize their propaganda apparatus, using resources they are not allocating to all the humanitarian crises we are experiencing,” he added.
Cuba’s President Miguel Diaz Canel, who describes critical journalists as Washington-backed “mercenaries,” has welcomed the Donald Trump administration’s cut to funding for non-state media that operate mostly from abroad, including Miami. USAID-funded projects for “so-called independent media and NGOs,” he wrote on X last month, amounted to nothing other than multi-million dollar “subversion.”
In Cuba, most media outlets belong to the state, their narrative controlled by the Communist Party. Some non-state digital sites have emerged in recent years, many operating from abroad and accessible only to Cubans with a VPN. El Toque, which received money from the National Endowment for Democracy—a non-profit foundation funded largely by appropriations from the US Congress—has had to lay off half its staff as its budget was slashed, said Nieves.
The resulting “paralysis” of critical media “will only contribute to a more misinformed populace subjected to the lies of the enemies of freedom and democracy,” the editor said. For journalists in Nicaragua and Venezuela—countries which, like Cuba, are under US sanctions for anti-democratic actions—the aid cuts have also been devastating. “It put us in a state of emergency,” Carlos Herrera, co-founder of the Nicaraguan news site Divergentes told AFP.
Divergentes, which operates from Costa Rica, cut its payroll in half and Herrera fears “a total information blackout” in Nicaragua. Several journalists have been banished or stripped of their nationality by Daniel Ortega’s government in recent years.
At least 300 Nicaraguan journalists have left the country, and four were arrested in the last 12 months, according to RSF. Nicaragua “no longer has independent media” operating within the country, where only state-run and media groups in “total self-censorship” survive, said Herrera. — AFP