Havana.- Former Cuban Minister of Economy Alejandro Gil, who less than two years ago was a close collaborator of the president, Miguel Díaz-Canel, and in charge of implementing the island's major monetary reform, was sentenced to life in prison for a dozen crimes, including espionage.
The sentence against Gil, announced this Monday by a note released by the Supreme People's Court of Cuba, puts an end to a chapter that began in February 2024, with his sudden dismissal after having been at the head of the Ministry of Economy and Planning since the first term of Díaz-Canel, in 2018.You may be interested in: http://The Attorney General of Honduras requests the "international capture" of former President Hernández
The also former deputy prime minister is the highest-ranking official removed for corruption on the island in decades. His indictment came as a surprise. The Cuban president sent him a "thank you hug" on social media hours after his dismissal. A month later, Díaz-Canel himself reported that Gil was under investigation for "serious errors" and stated that "neither the Party (Communist Party of Cuba, PCC, the only legal one) nor the Government" would allow "the proliferation of corruption, simulation and insensitivity." In its note this Monday, the court stated that the former minister was found guilty of espionage; acts to the detriment of economic activity or contracting; bribery and removal and damage of documents or other objects, documents or other objects in official custody and violation of official seals and infringement of the rules for the protection of classified documents. The former member of the PCC Central Committee was tried for these crimes in a first trial held behind closed doors in Havana between November 11 and 13. In addition, Gil was tried in a second trial, held between November 26 and 29, for bribery to commit forgery of public documents, influence peddling and tax evasion, all three on an ongoing basis. For this cause he was sentenced to 20 years in prison, the court indicated. Both sentences can be appealed within ten days.







