Saint Kitts and Nevis Leads with Compassion: US$100,000 Contribution to CARICOM Humanitarian Effort for Cuba

In a powerful demonstration of long-standing regional solidarity and reciprocal compassion, the Federation of Saint Kitts and Nevis has officially disbursed an initial $100,000 contribution to the Caribbean Community (CARICOM) collective humanitarian initiative for Cuba. This payment marks the first installment toward the bloc’s $500,000 total target to support the Cuban people amid ongoing hardship.

The commitment was first formalized during the landmark 50th Regular Meeting of the CARICOM Conference of Heads of Government, hosted by Saint Kitts and Nevis between February 24 and 27, 2026. At that gathering, Prime Minister of Saint Kitts and Nevis Dr. Terrance M. Drew, who currently holds the rotating position of CARICOM Chairman, unveiled the regional plan to mobilize urgently needed relief across all member states for Cuban communities.

Coordinated by the CARICOM Secretariat headquartered in Georgetown, Guyana, the cross-national initiative will oversee the sourcing, purchase, and transportation of critical necessities to Cuba. The aid package covers a broad range of high-priority items: nutrition-focused supplies including powdered milk and infant formula, shelf-stable food staples such as beans, wheat flour, rice and canned goods, basic pharmaceutical and medical equipment, and key infrastructure supplies including solar panels, rechargeable batteries and water storage tanks to support basic community services.

Notably, the regional relief effort has also received international backing from the Government of Mexico, which has stepped in to connect the initiative with verified local suppliers that can fulfill the order requirements. Mexico will additionally cover all costs for shipping the collected supplies from Mexican departure ports to Cuba, removing a major logistical and financial barrier to the effort.

Speaking on the contribution, Prime Minister Drew emphasized that Saint Kitts and Nevis holds unwavering solidarity with the Cuban people during their current period of difficulty. He framed the donation not as an act of charity, but as a reciprocal gesture of gratitude from a fellow Caribbean family member, pointing to decades of Cuban support for regional Caribbean nations.

“Cuba has never turned its back on the Caribbean. When our people needed doctors, Cuba sent them. When our students needed access to affordable, quality education, Cuba opened its classrooms to us. When natural disaster devastated our communities, Cuba was among the first nations to extend a hand of assistance,” Drew explained. “Today, we return that kindness not as charity, but as family. This is what CARICOM is meant to be—standing together, sharing burdens, and ensuring that no member of our Caribbean family faces hardship alone. Saint Kitts and Nevis is proud to contribute, and we stand ready to offer whatever further assistance we can in the days ahead.”

The cross-border humanitarian initiative embodies the core founding values of CARICOM: intentional collaboration, coordinated collective action, and mutual care among member states. As regional governments align to alleviate the challenges facing the Cuban people, the effort also reinforces the Caribbean bloc’s long-standing commitment to multilateral dialogue, mutual sovereign respect, and collaborative, peaceful problem-solving for shared regional challenges.

Drew concluded by reaffirming that the government of Saint Kitts and Nevis will maintain its commitment to supporting Cuba and advancing humanitarian cooperation and regional cohesion across the CARICOM bloc in all future efforts.