Neither electricity nor running water: protests in Havana after blackout by "Ian"

Hurricane "Ian" also swept across Cuba with indescribable force - leaving behind thousands of destroyed houses and flooded streets.

Neither electricity nor running water: protests in Havana after blackout by "Ian"

Hurricane "Ian" also swept across Cuba with indescribable force - leaving behind thousands of destroyed houses and flooded streets. Now the people in the capital Havana are taking to the streets because neither the electricity nor the water supply has been restored after five days.

Rare protests have broken out in Cuba for the third day in a row amid a massive power outage after Hurricane Ian. On Saturday evening (local time), some residents of the central district of Vedado set up a roadblock with overturned garbage containers on the busy Línea street in the capital Havana. A few dozen participants demonstrated there, banging pots, because they hadn't had electricity or running water for five days.

Military representatives of the socialist one-party state tried to appease the locals with assurances that work was being done to repair the lines. But they were shouted down with angry complaints about the state's slow work. Some demonstrators also called for "freedom". Later, opponents and supporters of the government shouted slogans at each other.

Plainclothes police arrested at least one person. According to reports on social media, there were also protests in other parts of Havana. The state-owned electricity provider UNE had previously announced that the “deficit in power generation capacity” was expected to last all day. It was not disclosed how many people were without power. On Thursday it was said that ten percent of the connections in Havana had electricity.

"Ian" swept across the west of the Caribbean country on Tuesday as a category 3 out of 5 hurricane. There were floods, according to the government, thousands of houses and a large part of the infrastructure of the tobacco industry in the important growing region of Pinar del Río were destroyed. There was also a nationwide power outage. Many people, including in areas of the capital, had not had power restored by Saturday.

The water supply, which works via electric pumps, was also affected. Even before the storm, Cuba's power grid was in poor condition, with frequent outages. These were also a trigger for demonstrations against the government on July 11, 2021 - probably the largest since the Cuban revolution of 1959. Hundreds of participants were sentenced to prison terms, some of them long.