• 2 months ago
Cuba: Un país apagado
Desde Guantánamo, varios cubanos opinan acerca de las consecuencias que tiene para el pueblo la crisis energética que atraviesa la isla.
Encuesta ciudadana

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Transcript
00:00The situation in Guantánamo has been extremely critical since the 18th of this month.
00:20There was a general shutdown on the 18th, the system was disconnected.
00:24There were more than 18 hours of shutdowns from that date until the 20th, when the system fell again.
00:30This brought with it that the entire Cuban population was in an abyss.
00:36It is still an abyss, and as the days go by, the problem is still not solved.
00:41And we continue to face intense shutdowns of different hours in different places.
00:48Here in the province of Guantánamo, in the municipality of El Salvador,
00:52localities such as Cuneia and Costa Rica reached the 96th consecutive hours without electricity.
00:59This brought with it the mobilization of police forces in the municipality of El Salvador,
01:04which went there with the orientation to repress in case there were protests.
01:09But well, there were no protests, and they returned to their places.
01:13A total shutdown, total, generalized, that in the special period,
01:19that I remember, in the special period, there was no such generalized shutdown.
01:23The shutdowns of these days have been between 18, 14 and up to 18 hours a day without electricity.
01:29Here in the province of Guantánamo, we were up to 22 hours without electricity,
01:34with an intermediate of two hours of electricity.
01:37There were people who had even more, hours of waiting, others had 18, consecutive hours.
01:44The situation we are experiencing at the moment is critical.
01:49Bread sales have paralyzed, food sales have paralyzed.
01:53At the height we are at, we have not been able to preserve in any way
01:58the food we had in the refrigerators, as a result of the cold, everything was frozen.
02:08There is a very worrying thing that many people of the town,
02:13and I also wonder how it is possible that a single power plant
02:20shuts down, collapses the entire national system.
02:27There are power plants, there are other sub-stations, there are other stations.
02:34The power plant has been disconnected on certain occasions to repair it,
02:39to fix it, for breakdowns, I don't know what, I don't know what.
02:43There have been other situations that they have had to disconnect.
02:46There is something there that I don't want, that they don't speak clearly to the people.
02:51Well, most people had to go to Carbón Vegetal,
02:54buying a can of coal at a very expensive price,
02:57since people took advantage of this price,
03:00of this fall of the national power system,
03:03to increase the price of the can of coal, and thus be able to get rich.
03:10People like me, I had to remember when I was in prison,
03:14I had to fry eggs and make a rice with melted nylon and sack.
03:21I had to burn the sack with melted nylon and make a fire,
03:25and be able to cook eggs and rice,
03:27which is the only thing I was able to eat in my house in these days of shutdown.
03:30You can imagine that all this is leading to an unbearable suffering of the population.
03:35The little food that some people have in their freezers is being thrown away.
03:39The heat, the mosquitoes, the oporoche, the dengue that is ending,
03:43now without a fan, this really makes the situation of the Cuban people,
03:47especially in Guantanamero, insufferable.
03:49Ten, twelve hours of shutdown, hard, very hard,
03:54because there are people of the third age who have to feed themselves,
04:00there is no current, there were no bullets,
04:03many people from here have bullets,
04:08they can't buy, there was no bullet, there was no current.
04:13The number of people in the population had to go to the court and buy firewood, dry firewood.
04:21They had to go to the fields to buy firewood,
04:24to look for firewood in the mountains to be able to cook,
04:26since the coal that the Cuban government promised to sell in squares,
04:32in wineries and in agromarkets, was not sold at any time,
04:36and the person had to go to the firewood because the coal that was in the province,
04:41the particulars, the coal they had, did not go,
04:44did not give to be able to buy everything in the world.
04:48There is no solution to this problem for now, and I don't think there will be either.
04:52There will be improvements, some improvements,
04:54but the process will continue because the Cuban electric system,
04:56as well as the political social system, is thrown to the ground.
04:59That is the situation, that is the reality of Guantanamero today,
05:02suffering and more pain.

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