
Cuba’s National Sports Institute said on its website that Ramírez, 24, who won bantamweight gold in the 2016 Olympics in Rio de Janeiro and flyweight gold in the 2012 games in London, was “turning his back” on his teammates.
“Attitudes like this are far from our values and the discipline that characterizes our sport,” it said.
Ramírez’s immediate whereabouts were unknown.
The Caribbean island nation prides itself on punching above its weight in world sports, nurturing athletes from an early age under a Soviet-style system instituted after the 1959 leftist revolution.
With a population of 11 million people, Cuba has won 220 Olympic medals, including 77 gold – more than any other country in Latin America – and it has won the most Olympic gold medals in boxing of any country worldwide.
But Cuban athletes remain poorly paid amateurs and many defect with the hope of turning professional and securing multimillion-dollar contracts, often heading to Cuba’s former Cold War foe the United States, where Cubans still get special immigration treatment.
In March, double flyweight world champion Joahnys Argilagos, 21, abandoned the team during a tournament in Mexico.
Cuba has tried to counter the allure of big money by instilling in its athletes a strong sense of patriotism and offering financial bonuses to those who return from international competitions.
But the defections have continued. Among the Cuban boxing champions who defected to compete professionally are Guillermo Rigondeaux, Erislandy Lara, and Luis Ortiz.