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La Habana está muy mala
El huracán Rafael que atravesó la isla en la tarde del 6 de noviembre, provocó grandes afectaciones en las provincias de Artemisa, Mayabeque y La Habana.
Mientras algunos habaneros prefieren evadir la terrible situación en la que se encuentran, otros reconocen que la ciudad no está preparada para un huracán, y que la Habana está muy mala. Muy mala.
Reportaje exclusivo de ADN Cuba

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00:00La Habana no está en condiciones de aguantar un ciclón.
00:03La basura, las condiciones de la gente de cómo pudo vivir.
00:08De le caer la casa a la gente, La Habana está muy mala, La Habana se está cayendo por todo.
00:12El huracán Rafael es posible categoría 3 en escala A-perfecto, por un punto, entre Arboliza y Pinares del Ebro.
00:21Despite its proximity to the national territory, the authorities are asking for the best possible attention to the future evolution of Rafael.
00:30The Huracán Rafael, which crossed the island in the afternoon of November 6, caused great damage in the provinces of Artemisa, Mayabeque and La Habana.
00:39Although no deaths are reported, only in La Habana, the capital of the country, at least 461 collapses were recorded,
00:48between total and partial, and 495 electric poles on the floor.
00:53Until Thursday, thousands of evacuated people remained.
01:01While some Habaneros prefer to avoid the terrible situation they are in,
01:07others recognize that the city is not prepared for a hurricane, and that La Habana is very bad.
01:18La Habana is a very old city, many years old, and the factories are in a bad state.
01:28There is no reason to say that it can be done, no, it cannot be done.
01:35Electricity is something that hits us too much.
01:38For example, on television today, the news said that as long as there is a cyclone, there will be a shortage of electricity.
01:47They said it and immediately they took away the electricity here, where I live at the moment, in my house.
01:55No neighbor has electricity to store food in a refrigerator.
02:00They always take away the electricity, every day from 10 in the morning to 2 in the afternoon, one day yes, one day no.
02:06Yesterday they took away the electricity at 9 in the morning and they put it on at 5 in the afternoon.
02:10I have seen on television that there is a spot that says that if of the 4 million homes here in Cuba,
02:16a light bulb was turned off in 3 million, 60 watts were saved.
02:22We go, which is my hometown, they inform me from there that there is no electricity,
02:27that they only put it on for 2 hours a day.
02:29When they take away the electricity from us, we have no communication at all,
02:34neither by cell phone, nor by anything.
02:37I can't say that we have living conditions here either,
02:41because look, my house is full of holes in the roof.
02:47The whole house is filtered, the house, the room,
02:51this here, the living room is filtered.
02:55So my son has to be putting pots around here,
02:59pipes over there, so that there is no water missing from the floor, right?
03:03I have been bedridden since 2016, I don't walk.
03:09The medicine, they have to send it to me from the United States, from the blockade.
03:16The probes that pass through me, because I use probes,
03:21they send them to me from the United States, because in Cuba, according to them, there is nothing.
03:26There are no conditions.
03:28The garbage, the conditions of the people, how they live, etc.
03:33We have a shortage of electricity every month.
03:37Now there is no light in Cuba.
03:39It's too late.
03:41We don't have power.
03:45And that's the problem.
03:47There is a cyclone and a cyclone.
03:50The house is very bad.
03:52There is no way to fix the house.
03:55With what money do you go to work?
03:57If the house falls to the people, they are going to be very bad.
04:01They are going to be falling with everything.

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