Cuba charges six exiles with terrorism in speedboat attack


A vendor sits along a street, following an armed incident involving a Florida-registered speedboat and a Cuban patrol, in Santa Clara, Cuba, February 26, 2026. REUTERS/Norlys Perez

HAVANA, March 3 (Reuters) - ⁠Cuban prosecutors formally charged six people with "crimes of terrorism" and ordered them held ⁠in pretrial detention on Tuesday in connection with an incident last week ‌in which Cuban forces killed four Cuban nationals and wounded six others aboard a speedboat that entered Cuban waters.

Cuba's Interior Ministry announced the gunbattle at sea last Wednesday, accusing the Cuban exiles of opening ​fire on a border guard vessel, saying they came ⁠from the United States with the ⁠intent to sow chaos and attack military units on the Communist-ruled island.

Cuban forces returned ⁠fire ‌and took the six survivors into custody, Cuba said.

There was no further update as to the condition of the wounded detainees, nor their whereabouts at a ⁠time of heightened tensions between the U.S. and Cuba. ​Washington has effectively halted ‌all oil shipments to the Communist-ruled island while demandingpolitical and economic changes.

Cuban officials ⁠have said the ​purported infiltrators came armed with nearly 13,000 rounds of ammunition, 13 rifles and 11 pistols, displaying the captured armaments from the studio on a special television program on Friday.

They also showed ⁠pictures of the vessels, each peppered with bullet holes ​fromthefirefight they said took place atarange of 20 meters(66 feet).

Cuba has said at least two of those taken into custody had been previously placed on a list of accused ⁠terrorists.

Prosecutor Edward Robert Campbell told the state television program on Friday the accused faced a host of possible charges including crimes associated with terrorist acts.

If convicted they could face prison terms of up to 10 to 15 years for the lesser offenses and ​20 to 30 years - or even the death penalty - for ⁠the more serious charges, Campbell said.

U.S. politicians have expressed skepticism over Cuba's version of events, ​calling for independent investigations. Secretary of State Marco ‌Rubio it was not a U.S. operation and ​that no U.S. government personnel were involved.

(Reporting by Daniel Trotta in Havana; Additional reporting by Daina Beth Solomon in Mexico City; Editing by Sonali Paul)

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