Cuba Vote Opens Final Chapter of Castro Era

 In this file photo taken on November 26, 2017 a schoolboy remains standing at a polling station at Nautico neighbourhood in Havana during municipal elections
In this file photo taken on November 26, 2017 a schoolboy remains standing at a polling station at Nautico neighbourhood in Havana during municipal elections
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Cuba Vote Opens Final Chapter of Castro Era

 In this file photo taken on November 26, 2017 a schoolboy remains standing at a polling station at Nautico neighbourhood in Havana during municipal elections
In this file photo taken on November 26, 2017 a schoolboy remains standing at a polling station at Nautico neighbourhood in Havana during municipal elections

Cubans go to the polls on Sunday to vote for a new National Assembly marking a historic step in a process leading to the election of a new president outside the Castro family.

More than eight million Cubans will vote to ratify two official lists of candidates - one to form the 605-member National Assembly and another to constitute the 14 provincial assemblies totaling 1,265 delegates.

The new members of the National Assembly will be tasked with choosing a successor to 86-year-old President Raul Castro who steps down next month.

Raul took over in 2006 from his ailing brother Fidel, who had governed since seizing power during the 1959 revolution, AFP reported.

"They're the most important elections of recent years, because we are going to vote for new people who will govern from then on," day-care center guardian Ramon Perez told AFP.

The designation of candidates is based on merit, abilities and the commitment of the people," Raul Castro said when he announced the elections last year.

More than half of the candidates, 322, are women.

First Vice-President Miguel Diaz-Canel, 57, is expected to become president, according to Reuters.

"There will still be a president of Cuba in the process of defending the revolution," Canel said in November.

Turnout for the election is expected to be around 90 percent, although voting is voluntary.

Opposition criticism of the process centers around the fact that the president is not chosen in direct elections.

For opposition, however, the only choice being not to vote for a certain candidate, leave blank or spoil one’s ballot.



White House Hits Back at Accounts Iran Moved Enriched Uranium

A handout satellite image made available by Maxar Technologies shows a close up view of holes and craters on a ridge at the Fordo underground uranium enrichment following US airstrikes, in Iran, 22 June 2025. EPA/MAXAR TECHNOLOGIES
A handout satellite image made available by Maxar Technologies shows a close up view of holes and craters on a ridge at the Fordo underground uranium enrichment following US airstrikes, in Iran, 22 June 2025. EPA/MAXAR TECHNOLOGIES
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White House Hits Back at Accounts Iran Moved Enriched Uranium

A handout satellite image made available by Maxar Technologies shows a close up view of holes and craters on a ridge at the Fordo underground uranium enrichment following US airstrikes, in Iran, 22 June 2025. EPA/MAXAR TECHNOLOGIES
A handout satellite image made available by Maxar Technologies shows a close up view of holes and craters on a ridge at the Fordo underground uranium enrichment following US airstrikes, in Iran, 22 June 2025. EPA/MAXAR TECHNOLOGIES

President Donald Trump’s administration hit back Wednesday at accounts Iran may have moved enriched uranium before US bombing.

A key question raised by experts is whether Iran, preparing for the strike, moved out some 400 kilogram of enriched uranium -- which could now be hidden elsewhere in the vast country.

“I can tell you, the United States had no indication that that enriched uranium was moved prior to the strikes, as I also saw falsely reported,” White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt told Fox News.

“As for what’s on the ground right now, it’s buried under miles and miles of rubble because of the success of these strikes on Saturday evening,” she said.

Vice President JD Vance, asked about the uranium on Sunday, had sounded less definitive and said the United States would discuss the issue with Iran.

“We’re going to work in the coming weeks to ensure that we do something with that fuel,” Vance told ABC News program “This Week.”

The quantity of uranium had been reported by the UN nuclear watchdog, the International Atomic Energy Agency, with which Iran is considering severing cooperation after the Israeli and US strikes on its nuclear program.

“The IAEA lost visibility on this material the moment hostilities began,” the agency’s chief, Rafael Grossi, told France 2 television.

But he added: “I don’t want to give the impression that it’s been lost or hidden.”

The US military said it dropped 14 GBU-57 bunker-buster bombs -- powerful 13,600-kilogram weapons -- on three Iranian nuclear sites.

Trump has repeatedly said that the attack “obliterated” Iran’s nuclear facilities, including the key site of Fordow buried inside a mountain.

But an initial classified assessment, first reported by CNN, was said to have concluded that the strike did not destroy key components and that Iran’s nuclear program was set back only months at most.

Trump’s intelligence chiefs also pushed back on Wednesday.

CIA Director John Radcliffe in a statement said that new intelligence from a “historically reliable” source indicated that “several key Iranian nuclear facilities were destroyed and would have to be rebuilt over the course of years.”

The uranium is enriched to 60 percent -- above levels for civilian usage but still below weapons grade.