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Spanish hotel group Meliá said on June 3 it will immediately stop managing, marketing and providing brand services for 15 of its hotels in Cuba, after notifying owners on May 26.
The move, carried out by its Portuguese unit Ilha Bela, affects properties across Havana, Varadero, Cayo Santa María, Cayo Coco and Holguín and follows a sharp fall in tourism demand, persistent energy shortages and deteriorating legal and security conditions on the island.
Most of the affected hotels were already closed or inactive.
The withdrawal comes amid stepped-up U.S. sanctions and an oil-related embargo that target GAESA, a Cuban military-run conglomerate and partner to foreign operators, and have constrained access to the U.S. financial system.
Officials say Meliá still lists about 20 other Cuban properties.
The decision follows cancellations by airlines, suspension of Visa and MasterCard operations on the island, and similar retrenchments by other foreign hotel chains.
Cuba has seen international arrivals slump nearly 48% year-on-year in the first quarter, amplifying the threat to thousands of jobs dependent on tourism.








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