Cuba: Small protests appear in Havana over islandwide blackout
A few hundred Cubans took to the streets Thursday night in Havana demanding the restoration of electricity, protesting more than two days after a blackout hit the entire island following the passage of Hurricane Ian.
An Associated Press journalist saw a total of about 400 people gathered in at least two spots in the Cerro neighbourhood shouting, “We want light, we want light,” and banging pots and pans.
It was the first public outpouring of anger after electricity problems spread from western Cuba, where Ian hit and knocked out all of the island’s power grid Tuesday night, leaving its 11 million people in the dark. The storm also left three people dead and caused still unquantified damage.
In addition to power problems Thursday in Havana, internet service was out, and cellphones did not work.
Groups that monitor internet access confirmed to the AP the internet disruption on the island.
“We can confirm the near-total internet blackout in Cuba,” said Alp Toker, director of Netblocks, a London-based internet monitoring firm. He said that what his group sees is different from what happened right after the hurricane hit the island.
“We believe the incident impacted the free flow of information amid protests significantly,” he said.
Doug Madory, director of internet analysis at Kentik Inc., a network intelligence company, describes it as a “total internet blackout” that started at 00:30 GMT.
At a protest on Primellef Street, police arrived, but demonstrators remained on one of the corners. About ten blocks away, on the Calzada del Cerro, other protesters surrounded a work team trying to repair a pole and a light transformer.
The two groups of protesters were still in the streets late into the night, but the gatherings remained peaceful.
In July 2021, Cuba saw its largest social protest in a decade. Thousands of people, weary of power failures and shortages of goods exacerbated by the pandemic and U.S. sanctions, turned out in cities across the island to vent their anger. Some also lashed out at the government. Hundreds were arrested and prosecuted, prompting harsh criticism of the administration of President Miguel Diaz-Canel.
The government has not said what percentage of the population remained without electricity, but electrical authorities said only 10% of Havana’s 2 million people had power Thursday.
Earlier Thursday, Ivette Garrido shared how she hurried last week to get the 6 kilograms (13 pounds) of subsidised chicken allotted to her family by Cuba’s government and put it in the freezer, happy to have meat to get through Hurricane Ian.
Now she is considering giving the chicken to her three dogs before it goes wrong as a massive power blackout caused by the storm extends beyond two days, and everything in her freezer thaws amid scorching temperatures.
“We are not having a perfect time, trying to survive, to keep things from thawing,” said Garrido, who lives with her mother and a 19-year-old daughter in the town of Cojimar on the outskirts of Havana.
Electricity returned in some parts of Cuba on Wednesday, while it came on, then shut off again in other regions. Experts said the total blackout showed the vulnerability of Cuba’s power grid and warned that it would require time and sources — things the country doesn’t have — to fix the problem.
Authorities have promised to work without rest to address the issue.
“We have never been so long without electricity,” Garrido said. “They put it at 24 hours, at 36, but it’s already been more than 48. It’s criminal. Who is responsible for this?”
She has placed bottles of frozen water that had been in the freezer next to the chicken, along with some pork and sausages, to try to preserve the meat longer. A fan and television also await the return of electricity.
Calls by AP to a dozen people in Cuba’s main cities — Holguín, Guantánamo, Matanzas, Ciego de Ávila, Camagüey and Santiago — found similar problems to Havana, with most reporting their neighbourhoods were still without electricity.
Authorities say the total blackout happened because of a failure in the connections between Cuba’s three regions — west, centre and east — caused by Ian’s winds.
Cuba’s power grid “was already in a critical and immunocompromised state as a result of the deterioration of the thermoelectric plants. The patient is now on life support,” said Jorge Piñon, director of the Center for International Energy and Environmental Policy’s Latin America and Caribbean program at the University of Texas.
Cuba has 13 power generation plants, eight traditional thermoelectric plants, and five floating power plants rented from Turkey since 2019. There is also a group of small plants distributed throughout the country since an energy reform in 2006.
But the plants are poorly maintained, a phenomenon the government attributed to the lack of funds and U.S. sanctions. Complications in obtaining fuel are also a problem.
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