
UN Resident Coordinator
Senior UN official in Cuba coordinating humanitarian response to the 2026 crisis
Last refreshed: 7 May 2026 · Appears in 1 active topic
How many Cubans are without reliable food, water, or medical access in 2026?
Timeline for UN Resident Coordinator
Mentioned in: Havana gas cut leaves milk undelivered
Cuba DispatchAssessed Cuba humanitarian needs as acute and persistent across 8 provinces
Cuba Dispatch: UN says two million Cubans need aid nowHow bad is the humanitarian situation in Cuba in 2026?
What is a UN Resident Coordinator?
What is the UN Resident Coordinator's role in Cuba?
Background
The UN Resident Coordinator in Cuba assessed in April 2026 that humanitarian needs remain quite acute and persistent, with approximately 2 million people across 8 provinces targeted for assistance, 1 million dependent on water trucking, 96,000 pending surgeries including 11,000 for children, and a funding gap of USD 68 million against USD 26.2 million mobilised. The assessment is the most authoritative multilateral quantification of Cuba's humanitarian emergency.
The UN Resident Coordinator (RC) is the UN Secretary-General's designated representative in each country, leading the UN Country Team and coordinating the collective humanitarian and development response. In Cuba the RC role is particularly sensitive: the Cuban government restricts independent access, making the RC's coordination function reliant on maintaining a working relationship with Havana while reporting honestly on conditions. The RC office liaises with OCHA, WHO, WFP, and UNICEF operations in Cuba.
The April 2026 RC assessment carries weight because it comes from within the UN system that Cuba engages diplomatically, rather than from exile organisations the government dismisses. Its publication of a specific USD 68 million funding gap creates direct pressure on donor governments and complicates any US argument that EO 14380 has no humanitarian consequences. The RC role is not Cuba-specific; this office exists in every UN member state, meaning assessments of this type can provide comparable humanitarian benchmarks across geopolitical crises worldwide.