IBOV 175,739 ▼ 1.20% IPSA 10,928 ▼ 1.17% IPC MEX 65,973 ▼ 0.79% MERVAL 3,235,295 ▼ 1.37% COLCAP 2,307.67 — UNCH BVL PERÚ 56,917.82 ▼ 0.86% USD/BRL5.13▼ 0.12% USD/MXN17.49▼ 0.20% USD/CLP932.70▲ 0.85% USD/COP3,235▼ 0.85% USD/PEN3.40▼ 0.23% USD/ARS1,482▼ 0.07% USD/UYU40.22— 0.00% USD/PYG6,045▲ 1.22% USD/BOB10.35▲ 6.04% USD/DOP58.37▲ 0.49% USD/CRC448.53▲ 1.22% USD/GTQ7.62▲ 2.07% USD/HNL26.73▲ 1.41% USD/NIO36.62▲ 0.63% USD/VES722.19▼ 0.13% USD/PAB1.00— 0.00% USD/BZD2.00— 0.00% USD/JMD157.69▲ 0.70% USD/TTD6.74▼ 0.12% EUR/BRL5.84▲ 0.35% BRENT 86.33 ▲ 3.64% WTI 80.86 ▲ 3.48% IRON ORE 161.91 — — COPPER 6.39 ▲ 2.44% GOLD 4,030 ▲ 0.83% SILVER 58.28 ▲ 1.12% SOY 1,189 ▼ 1.12% CORN 458.50 ▲ 4.74% WHEAT 634.00 ▲ 1.12% COFFEE 311.50 ▼ 9.18% SUGAR 14.76 ▲ 0.07% ORANGE JUICE 137.15 ▼ 7.24% COTTON 81.66 ▲ 2.29% COCOA 5,939 ▲ 0.34% BEEF 234.95 ▼ 0.11% CATTLE 354.20 ▼ 0.11% LITHIUM 70.24 ▼ 2.88% PETR4 40.66 ▲ 2.55% VALE3 72.85 ▼ 1.79% ITUB4 43.52 ▼ 1.76% BBDC4 18.77 ▼ 0.48% ABEV3 15.83 ▲ 0.06% BBAS3 20.24 ▼ 1.65% B3SA3 15.12 ▼ 1.95% WEGE3 44.39 ▼ 4.56% PRIO3 57.20 ▲ 3.16% SUZB3 41.49 ▼ 0.14% RENT3 40.20 ▼ 2.19% AZZA3 19.22 ▲ 0.63% CSAN3 3.90 ▼ 4.18% RAIZ4 0.33 ▼ 5.71% PCAR3 2.59 ▼ 5.13% GMAT3 3.94 ▼ 0.76% PSSA3 54.04 ▼ 1.69% CVCB3 1.25 — 0.00% POSI3 3.99 ▲ 0.50% SLCE3 13.87 ▼ 1.07% NATU3 8.60 ▼ 0.92% BRKM5 6.94 ▲ 4.68% RANI3 7.95 ▼ 0.75% CSNA3 5.24 ▲ 1.16% CMIN3 5.45 ▲ 4.21% USIM5 8.38 ▼ 0.83% GGBR4 22.82 ▼ 0.83% ENEV3 26.88 ▼ 2.43% CPFE3 46.84 ▼ 2.15% CMIG4 11.07 ▼ 2.72% EQTL3 40.21 ▼ 1.71% LREN3 14.15 ▼ 3.21% VIVT3 34.73 ▼ 2.85% RAIL3 14.11 ▼ 1.74% KLABIN 17.48 ▼ 0.34% RAIA DROGASIL 18.20 ▼ 3.04% RDOR3 35.56 ▼ 1.28% HAPV3 10.46 ▼ 1.32% FLRY3 16.15 ▼ 1.64% SMTO3 16.37 — 0.00% UGPA3 30.93 ▲ 0.72% VBBR3 32.76 ▼ 0.73% BBSE3 40.28 ▼ 0.17% BPAC11 57.52 ▼ 2.06% CURY3 33.12 ▼ 3.19% AERI3 2.08 ▼ 0.48% VIVARA 23.11 ▼ 1.79% COMPASS 24.77 ▼ 2.86% VAMOS 3.02 ▼ 1.31% SANB11 27.37 ▼ 0.91% ASAI3 8.71 ▼ 1.80% SBSP3 30.37 ▼ 2.38% WALMEX 49.66 ▲ 0.69% GMEXICO 195.76 ▼ 1.74% FEMSA 225.36 ▲ 0.92% CEMEX 21.79 ▼ 0.32% GFNORTE 181.91 ▼ 2.51% BIMBO 55.97 ▼ 0.23% TELEVISA 9.58 ▼ 1.54% AMX 22.86 ▲ 0.70% GAP 407.66 ▼ 1.17% ASUR 278.66 ▼ 2.27% OMA 232.47 ▼ 1.70% KOF 181.26 ▲ 0.62% GRUMA 281.37 ▼ 0.57% KIMBER 38.22 ▲ 0.24% SQM-B 67,211 ▼ 0.80% COPEC 6,057 ▼ 1.33% BSANTANDER 78.20 ▼ 1.01% FALABELLA 5,905 — 0.00% ENELAM 84.20 ▼ 1.41% CENCOSUD 2,040 ▼ 0.25% CMPC 1,078 ▼ 2.80% BANCO CHILE 185.00 ▼ 2.05% LATAM AIR 24.90 ▼ 5.18% YPF 77,175 ▲ 3.73% GGAL 8,095 ▼ 2.88% PAMPA 5,225 ▲ 0.87% TXAR 661.50 ▼ 1.42% ALUAR 964.50 ▼ 1.13% TGS 9,580 ▼ 0.16% CEPU 2,324 ▼ 3.01% MIRGOR 17,050 ▼ 1.16% COME 44.85 ▼ 2.31% LOMA NEGRA 3,500 ▼ 2.30% BYMA 308.25 ▼ 1.83% TELECOM ARG 4,248 ▲ 0.06% ECOPETROL 15.88 ▲ 1.93% BANCOLOMBIA 80.42 ▼ 3.05% GRUPO AVAL 4.91 ▼ 3.16% CREDICORP 389.22 ▼ 2.89% SOUTHERN COPPER 174.53 ▼ 0.74% BUENAVENTURA 29.82 ▼ 0.60% MERCADOLIBRE 1,867 ▲ 0.81% NUBANK 13.67 ▼ 0.65% XP 16.37 ▼ 3.25% PAGSEGURO 9.28 ▲ 0.32% STONE 11.15 ▼ 0.54% GLOBANT 32.12 ▲ 7.21% TECNOGLASS 42.84 ▼ 2.41% GAP AIRPORT 232.77 ▼ 1.22% ASUR 278.66 ▼ 2.27% OMA AIRPORT 106.13 ▼ 1.77% AMX ADR 26.02 ▲ 0.04% FEMSA ADR 129.01 ▲ 1.06% CEMEX ADR 12.45 ▼ 0.24% PETROBRAS ADR 17.88 ▲ 3.23% VALE ADR 14.18 ▼ 1.94% ITAU ADR 8.47 ▼ 1.74% SANTANDER BR 5.34 ▼ 1.02% AMBEV ADR 3.06 ▼ 0.33% CSN 1.03 ▲ 1.49% GERDAU 4.49 ▼ 0.22% LATAM ADR 53.33 ▼ 5.53% BTC 62,498 ▲ 0.42% ETH 1,779 ▲ 0.34% SOL 74.93 ▲ 0.09% XRP 1.07 ▲ 0.16% BNB 569.62 ▲ 0.53% ADA 0.16 ▲ 0.87% DOGE 0.07 ▲ 0.35% AVAX 6.47 ▲ 0.40% LINK 7.91 ▲ 0.49% DOT 0.85 ▲ 1.13% LTC 43.53 ▲ 0.09% BCH 234.68 ▼ 0.66% TRX 0.32 ▲ 0.15% XLM 0.18 ▼ 1.02% HBAR 0.07 ▼ 1.09% NEAR 1.99 ▲ 3.82% ATOM 1.53 ▼ 0.65% AAVE 95.28 ▲ 0.97% SELIC 14.25% EMBRAER 83.01 ▼ 1.88% EMBRAER ADR 64.48 ▼ 2.32% JBS 11.80 ▼ 0.92% JBS BDR 60.61 ▼ 0.28% MBRF3 15.72 ▲ 1.09% MBRFY 3.03 ▲ 0.33% INTER 5.65 ▼ 2.92% EGX 52,338 ▼ 0.51% USD/ZAR16.48▲ 0.02% USD/NGN 1,378 — 0.00% NIKKEI 67,744 ▲ 0.74% CSI300 4,797 ▲ 2.15% HSI 24,354 ▲ 0.58% NIFTY 24,084 ▼ 0.53% KOSPI 6,857 ▲ 0.73% JCI 6,069 ▲ 0.52% USD/JPY162.33▼ 0.07% USD/CNY6.78▼ 0.04% DAX 25,001 ▼ 0.45% CAC 8,306 ▼ 0.71% FTSE 10,464 ▼ 0.32% MIB 52,494 ▼ 0.60% IBEX 19,151 ▼ 0.96% STOXX 637.50 ▼ 0.55% EUR/USD1.14▲ 0.14% GBP/USD1.34▼ 0.20% SPX 7,515 ▼ 0.79% DJI 52,499 ▼ 0.26% NDX 29,264 ▼ 1.88% RUT 2,953 ▼ 0.83% TSX 35,253 ▼ 0.15% VIX 17.25 ▲ 0.52% USD/CAD1.41▼ 0.35% US10Y 4.6090 ▲ 0.88% IBOV 175,739 ▼ 1.20% IPSA 10,928 ▼ 1.17% IPC MEX 65,973 ▼ 0.79% MERVAL 3,235,295 ▼ 1.37% COLCAP 2,307.67 — UNCH BVL PERÚ 56,917.82 ▼ 0.86% USD/BRL 5.13 ▼ 0.12% USD/MXN 17.49 ▼ 0.20% USD/CLP 932.70 ▲ 0.85% USD/COP 3,235 ▼ 0.85% USD/PEN 3.40 ▼ 0.23% USD/ARS 1,482 ▼ 0.07% USD/UYU 40.22 ▲ 0.96% USD/PYG 6,045 ▲ 1.22% USD/BOB 10.35 ▲ 6.04% USD/DOP 58.37 ▲ 0.49% USD/CRC 448.53 ▲ 1.22% USD/GTQ 7.62 ▲ 2.07% USD/HNL 26.73 ▲ 1.41% USD/NIO 36.62 ▲ 0.63% USD/VES 722.19 ▲ 0.24% USD/PAB 1.00 — 0.00% USD/BZD 2.00 — 0.00% USD/JMD 157.69 ▲ 0.70% USD/TTD 6.74 ▲ 1.05% EUR/BRL 5.84 ▲ 0.35% BRENT 86.33 ▲ 3.64% WTI 80.86 ▲ 3.48% IRON ORE 161.91 — — COPPER 6.39 ▲ 2.44% GOLD 4,030 ▲ 0.83% SILVER 58.28 ▲ 1.12% SOY 1,189 ▼ 1.12% CORN 458.50 ▲ 4.74% WHEAT 634.00 ▲ 1.12% COFFEE 311.50 ▼ 9.18% SUGAR 14.76 ▲ 0.07% ORANGE JUICE 137.15 ▼ 7.24% COTTON 81.66 ▲ 2.29% COCOA 5,939 ▲ 0.34% BEEF 234.95 ▼ 0.11% CATTLE 354.20 ▼ 0.11% LITHIUM 70.24 ▼ 2.88% PETR4 40.66 ▲ 2.55% VALE3 72.85 ▼ 1.79% ITUB4 43.52 ▼ 1.76% BBDC4 18.77 ▼ 0.48% ABEV3 15.83 ▲ 0.06% BBAS3 20.24 ▼ 1.65% B3SA3 15.12 ▼ 1.95% WEGE3 44.39 ▼ 4.56% PRIO3 57.20 ▲ 3.16% SUZB3 41.49 ▼ 0.14% RENT3 40.20 ▼ 2.19% AZZA3 19.22 ▲ 0.63% CSAN3 3.90 ▼ 4.18% RAIZ4 0.33 ▼ 5.71% PCAR3 2.59 ▼ 5.13% GMAT3 3.94 ▼ 0.76% PSSA3 54.04 ▼ 1.69% CVCB3 1.25 — 0.00% POSI3 3.99 ▲ 0.50% SLCE3 13.87 ▼ 1.07% NATU3 8.60 ▼ 0.92% BRKM5 6.94 ▲ 4.68% RANI3 7.95 ▼ 0.75% CSNA3 5.24 ▲ 1.16% CMIN3 5.45 ▲ 4.21% USIM5 8.38 ▼ 0.83% GGBR4 22.82 ▼ 0.83% ENEV3 26.88 ▼ 2.43% CPFE3 46.84 ▼ 2.15% CMIG4 11.07 ▼ 2.72% EQTL3 40.21 ▼ 1.71% LREN3 14.15 ▼ 3.21% VIVT3 34.73 ▼ 2.85% RAIL3 14.11 ▼ 1.74% KLABIN 17.48 ▼ 0.34% RAIA DROGASIL 18.20 ▼ 3.04% RDOR3 35.56 ▼ 1.28% HAPV3 10.46 ▼ 1.32% FLRY3 16.15 ▼ 1.64% SMTO3 16.37 — 0.00% UGPA3 30.93 ▲ 0.72% VBBR3 32.76 ▼ 0.73% BBSE3 40.28 ▼ 0.17% BPAC11 57.52 ▼ 2.06% CURY3 33.12 ▼ 3.19% AERI3 2.08 ▼ 0.48% VIVARA 23.11 ▼ 1.79% COMPASS 24.77 ▼ 2.86% VAMOS 3.02 ▼ 1.31% SANB11 27.37 ▼ 0.91% ASAI3 8.71 ▼ 1.80% SBSP3 30.37 ▼ 2.38% WALMEX 49.66 ▲ 0.69% GMEXICO 195.76 ▼ 1.74% FEMSA 225.36 ▲ 0.92% CEMEX 21.79 ▼ 0.32% GFNORTE 181.91 ▼ 2.51% BIMBO 55.97 ▼ 0.23% TELEVISA 9.58 ▼ 1.54% AMX 22.86 ▲ 0.70% GAP 407.66 ▼ 1.17% ASUR 278.66 ▼ 2.27% OMA 232.47 ▼ 1.70% KOF 181.26 ▲ 0.62% GRUMA 281.37 ▼ 0.57% KIMBER 38.22 ▲ 0.24% SQM-B 67,211 ▼ 0.80% COPEC 6,057 ▼ 1.33% BSANTANDER 78.20 ▼ 1.01% FALABELLA 5,905 — 0.00% ENELAM 84.20 ▼ 1.41% CENCOSUD 2,040 ▼ 0.25% CMPC 1,078 ▼ 2.80% BANCO CHILE 185.00 ▼ 2.05% LATAM AIR 24.90 ▼ 5.18% YPF 77,175 ▲ 3.73% GGAL 8,095 ▼ 2.88% PAMPA 5,225 ▲ 0.87% TXAR 661.50 ▼ 1.42% ALUAR 964.50 ▼ 1.13% TGS 9,580 ▼ 0.16% CEPU 2,324 ▼ 3.01% MIRGOR 17,050 ▼ 1.16% COME 44.85 ▼ 2.31% LOMA NEGRA 3,500 ▼ 2.30% BYMA 308.25 ▼ 1.83% TELECOM ARG 4,248 ▲ 0.06% ECOPETROL 15.88 ▲ 1.93% BANCOLOMBIA 80.42 ▼ 3.05% GRUPO AVAL 4.91 ▼ 3.16% CREDICORP 389.22 ▼ 2.89% SOUTHERN COPPER 174.53 ▼ 0.74% BUENAVENTURA 29.82 ▼ 0.60% MERCADOLIBRE 1,867 ▲ 0.81% NUBANK 13.67 ▼ 0.65% XP 16.37 ▼ 3.25% PAGSEGURO 9.28 ▲ 0.32% STONE 11.15 ▼ 0.54% GLOBANT 32.12 ▲ 7.21% TECNOGLASS 42.84 ▼ 2.41% GAP AIRPORT 232.77 ▼ 1.22% ASUR 278.66 ▼ 2.27% OMA AIRPORT 106.13 ▼ 1.77% AMX ADR 26.02 ▲ 0.04% FEMSA ADR 129.01 ▲ 1.06% CEMEX ADR 12.45 ▼ 0.24% PETROBRAS ADR 17.88 ▲ 3.23% VALE ADR 14.18 ▼ 1.94% ITAU ADR 8.47 ▼ 1.74% SANTANDER BR 5.34 ▼ 1.02% AMBEV ADR 3.06 ▼ 0.33% CSN 1.03 ▲ 1.49% GERDAU 4.49 ▼ 0.22% LATAM ADR 53.33 ▼ 5.53% BTC 62,498 ▲ 0.42% ETH 1,779 ▲ 0.34% SOL 74.93 ▲ 0.09% XRP 1.07 ▲ 0.16% BNB 569.62 ▲ 0.53% ADA 0.16 ▲ 0.87% DOGE 0.07 ▲ 0.35% AVAX 6.47 ▲ 0.40% LINK 7.91 ▲ 0.49% DOT 0.85 ▲ 1.13% LTC 43.53 ▲ 0.09% BCH 234.68 ▼ 0.66% TRX 0.32 ▲ 0.15% XLM 0.18 ▼ 1.02% HBAR 0.07 ▼ 1.09% NEAR 1.99 ▲ 3.82% ATOM 1.53 ▼ 0.65% AAVE 95.28 ▲ 0.97% SELIC 14.25% EMBRAER 83.01 ▼ 1.88% EMBRAER ADR 64.48 ▼ 2.32% JBS 11.80 ▼ 0.92% JBS BDR 60.61 ▼ 0.28% MBRF3 15.72 ▲ 1.09% MBRFY 3.03 ▲ 0.33% INTER 5.65 ▼ 2.92% EGX 52,338 ▼ 0.51% USD/ZAR 16.49 ▲ 0.16% USD/NGN 1,378 — 0.00% NIKKEI 67,744 ▲ 0.74% CSI300 4,797 ▲ 2.15% HSI 24,354 ▲ 0.58% NIFTY 24,084 ▼ 0.53% KOSPI 6,857 ▲ 0.73% JCI 6,069 ▲ 0.52% USD/JPY 162.36 ▼ 0.04% USD/CNY 6.7781 ▲ 0.11% DAX 25,001 ▼ 0.45% CAC 8,306 ▼ 0.71% FTSE 10,464 ▼ 0.32% MIB 52,494 ▼ 0.60% IBEX 19,151 ▼ 0.96% STOXX 637.50 ▼ 0.55% EUR/USD 1.1393 ▲ 0.05% GBP/USD 1.3359 ▲ 0.07% SPX 7,515 ▼ 0.79% DJI 52,499 ▼ 0.26% NDX 29,264 ▼ 1.88% RUT 2,953 ▼ 0.83% TSX 35,253 ▼ 0.15% VIX 17.25 ▲ 0.52% USD/CAD 1.4112 ▼ 0.29% US10Y 4.6090 ▲ 0.88%
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Tuesday, July 14, 2026

Cuba Caribbean

Ramiro Valdés, One of the Last Men Who Sailed With Cuba’s Castro Has Died

By · June 22, 2026 · 5 min read

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History · Cuba

Key Facts

The death. Ramiro Valdés Menéndez, a commander of the Cuban Revolution, died in Havana on Sunday at the age of ninety-four.

The résumé. He was one of only twelve men to survive the 1956 Granma landing that launched Fidel Castro’s war.

The role. He built and twice ran the interior ministry that became the island’s security and intelligence machine.

The fall and return. A clash with Fidel Castro in 1986 pushed him out for seventeen years, before he returned to the top in 2003.

What it leaves. His death narrows the living founders of 1959 to essentially Raúl Castro and Guillermo García Frías.

The backdrop. He died amid Cuba’s deepest economic slump in decades, with long daily blackouts across the island.

The death of Ramiro Valdés removes one of the very last men who fought their way to power with Fidel Castro, and it leaves the Cuban Revolution with almost no living link to where it began.

Ramiro Valdés, commander of the Cuban Revolution, who has died in Havana at 94
Ramiro Valdés Menéndez, a commander of the Cuban Revolution, died in Havana at ninety-four. (Photo internet reproduction)
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Ramiro Valdés Menéndez, one of the last surviving commanders of the Cuban Revolution, died in Havana on Sunday morning at the age of ninety-four. His death was announced by President Miguel Díaz-Canel and confirmed in an official notice from the Communist Party, the state and the government.

For most readers outside the island his name will mean little. Inside Cuba he was, for more than sixty years, one of the most powerful and most feared men in the country.

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Who Ramiro Valdés was

He was there at the very start. Born in 1932, he was barely twenty-one when he joined Fidel Castro’s failed 1953 assault on the Moncada barracks, the attack treated in Cuba as the opening shot of the revolution.

Three years later he was one of roughly eighty fighters who sailed from México aboard the yacht Granma to restart the rebellion. Only about a dozen survived the landing, a group that also included Fidel Castro, his brother Raúl and the Argentine revolutionary Che Guevara.

According to the official death notice published by Cubadebate, he fought as a second-in-command under Guevara and helped win the decisive Battle of Santa Clara, the clash that broke the old regime in late 1958. That record earned him the honorary rank of Comandante de la Revolución, a title only a handful of men ever held.

The man who built the security state

After 1959 his power lay in one institution above all. He founded and twice led the Ministry of the Interior, known by its Spanish initials MININT, the body that runs Cuba’s police, intelligence and state-security services.

This is where the two versions of his life part ways. To the government he was a loyal servant of the homeland, and the official tribute praised his devotion to the revolutionary cause.

To opponents at home and in exile he was the architect of the apparatus that watched, detained and silenced dissenters, the system Cubans know as the G2. When anti-government protests swept the island in July 2021, a crowd in the town of Palma Soriano was filmed shouting “murderer” at him in the street.

A fall, and an unlikely comeback

His career was not a straight climb. In 1986, while serving as interior minister, he fell out with Fidel Castro and was pushed out of the inner circle, vanishing from public life for some seventeen years.

Then he came back. He returned to the Council of State in 2003 and was later handed the communications and information-technology ministry, a striking choice for a man already past seventy.

It was in that job that he made his most quoted remark, comparing the internet to a wild colt that had to be tamed before it could be useful. By 2009 he was a vice-president of the Council of Ministers, and for a time the third-ranking figure in the Communist Party.

Why his death matters now

The forward-looking point is about more than one man. Valdés was a living bridge between the current leadership under Díaz-Canel and the original generation that took power in 1959.

With him gone, that founding generation is essentially reduced to two names, the retired former president Raúl Castro, now ninety-five, and the veteran Guillermo García Frías. The men who actually fought in the mountains are almost all gone, and the government that rules in their name is run increasingly by people who were not yet born when the revolution won.

The timing sharpens the point. He died during Cuba’s worst economic crisis in decades, on an island living through long daily blackouts and severe shortages, just as the link to its own origin story fades.

Background: Cuba’s economy.

Frequently Asked Questions

Who was Ramiro Valdés?

He was one of the last surviving commanders of the Cuban Revolution, who fought alongside Fidel Castro and Che Guevara. He went on to found and twice run Cuba’s interior ministry, the heart of its security and intelligence system.

Why is he a controversial figure?

The Cuban government honoured him as a loyal hero of the revolution. Critics and exiles instead remember him as the architect of the state-security apparatus used to suppress dissent, and protesters once shouted “murderer” at him in 2021.

What does his death mean for Cuba?

It leaves the founding generation of 1959 reduced to essentially Raúl Castro and Guillermo García Frías. The Cuban Revolution loses one of its last direct links to its origins, at a moment of deep economic crisis.

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