HAVANA — Two Mexican Navy ships laden with humanitarian aid docked in Cuba on Thursday as a U.S. blockade deepens the island's energy crisis.
The ships arrived two weeks after U.S. President Donald Trump threatened tariffs on any country selling or providing oil to Cuba, prompting the island to ration energy in recent days.
The Mexican government said that one ship carried some 536 tons of food including milk, rice, beans, sardines, meat products, cookies, canned tuna, and vegetable oil, as well as personal hygiene items. The second ship carried just over 277 tons of powdered milk.
Yohandri Espinosa, a 34-year-old engineer, observed the ships arrive with his daughter and took pictures.
''This is incredibly important aid for the Cuban people at this moment,'' he said. ''We are living through difficult times of great need and uncertainty, and we don't know how long we will be like this.''
Cuban President Miguel Díaz-Canel has called Trump's threats an ''energy blockade'' and said it affects transportation, hospitals, schools, tourism and the production of food.
Cuban aviation officials warned airlines earlier this week that there isn't enough fuel for airplanes to refuel on the island. On Monday, Air Canada announced it was suspending flights to Cuba, while other airlines announced delays and layovers in the Dominican Republic before flights continued to Havana. The cuts in fuel are expected to be another blow to Cuba's once thriving tourism economy.
''Sometimes you think that things are going to improve, but it's not like that,'' said Javier González, a Cuban who sat on Havana's famed seawall watching the Mexican ships arrive. ''We can't stay how we are because it's too hard. We'll have to wait and see.''