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Cuba has suffered yet another nationwide blackout, with Union Electrica (UNE), the state electricity company, announcing a “total disconnection” across the entire island on Monday, leaving the country’s 9.6 million inhabitants without power.
For many Cubans, this isn’t an occasional inconvenience like a California rolling blackout. It’s a way of life. Some have electricity for only a few hours a day, while others go days without power, and this was all before the latest nationwide outage.
No electricity means no refrigeration, no lights, no internet, no running businesses, and often no reliable access to food or clean water on a regular basis.
Officials blame the blackouts on a lack of fuel, and it’s not hard to see why when the U.S. has imposed the longest-running trade embargo in history on Cuba.
Since January, the U.S. has tightened its oil restrictions, allowing just one Russian oil tanker to dock on the island. Without this needed fuel, power plants can’t operate, which causes the electrical grid to shut down. These economic sanctions are often sold as a way to pressure governments. But ordinary families are the ones sitting in the dark without food, medicine, or electricity.
Cuba is gradually restoring its power after the blackout, but the country’s energy crisis is far from over as sanctions continue to choke off fuel supplies.
Hoping to bring relief to its people, Cuba called an emergency session of the U.N. General Assembly, where it argued that the U.S. is carrying out what it describes as an “act of genocide” through its energy blockade and economic sanctions, saying the measures have created a humanitarian crisis for the Cuban people.
The United States wasn’t sympathetic. During the U.N. session, U.S. Ambassador Michael G. Waltz told Cuban representatives: “There always seems to be enough power for the Cuban dictatorship. Change your ways, turn the lights back on for your people.”
Translation: Give in to the demands of the United States, so that we may benefit, and then the suffering of your people will be over.