Las Vegas Review-Journal

Cuba releases details of U.S. official’s health matter

- By Michael Weissenste­in The Associated Press

HAVANA — Cuba released details Sunday on the latest mysterious health incident involving a U.S. diplomat in the country, saying that Cuban officials learned of the episode late last month when the U.S. said that an embassy official felt ill after hearing “undefined sounds” in her home in Havana.

Cuba said in a statement released by its Foreign Ministry that U.S. officials reported May 29 that a female embassy official had reported experienci­ng “health symptoms” after hearing the sounds in her home two days earlier.

Cuba said it sent investigat­ors to the home who found no potential source of a sound and were not granted access to the official.

U.S. officials said Friday that they had pulled two workers from Cuba and were testing them for possible brain injury. There was no immediate explanatio­n of why the Cuban statement only referred to one official.

The two individual­s are considered “potentiall­y new cases” but have not yet been “medically confirmed,” a State Department official said. Two other officials said the individual­s have been brought for testing to the University of Pennsylvan­ia, where doctors have been evaluating, treating and studying Americans affected in Cuba last year as well as almost 10 new possible cases from a U.S. consulate in China.

If confirmed by doctors to have the same condition, the two individual­s would mark the 25th and 26th confirmed patients from the bizarre incidents in Cuba that were first disclosed last year and have been deemed “specific attacks” by the U.S. government. The United States has said it doesn’t know who is behind it, but has argued Cuba is responsibl­e for protecting all diplomats on its soil. Cuba has denied any involvemen­t in or knowledge of what may have caused the injuries.

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