Bangkok Post

Havana reinforces public transport sector

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HAVANA: Cuba’s government said it was importing hundreds of micro-buses and buses to alleviate a growing transport shortage in Havana due to its clampdown on private sector taxis.

Given a chronicall­y deficient public transport system, Cubans in the capital have for decades relied on its more than 6,000 private taxis, many of them vintage US cars, in particular those offering shared services on fixed routes.

However, the Communist government published in July a series of new, tighter regulation­s on the private sector that included rules for taxis that would progressiv­ely go into effect across Cuba, starting in Havana from October.

Those rules oblige drivers, for example, to purchase a minimum amount of fuel from state gas stations with huge markups in order to curb the black market for fuel amid a decline in oil supplies from ally Venezuela. They also fix prices for the set, shared routes.

Some drivers in Havana have said the new rules are so stifling that they prevent them from making a living, so they would rather give up their licences to operate as taxis.

The Vice Minister for Transport Marta Oramas said on a broadcast roundtable discussion on Thursday evening that around 800 drivers had handed in their licences so far.

“The measures are really severe and every day there is more pressure in the streets with inspectors and police,” driver Julio Garcia said earlier this week.

“I’m going to hand in my licence,” he said.

The new rules also include a technical revision that Havana’s “rolling museum”, including Chevrolets, Plymouths and Fords from the 1950s, are struggling to pass, Ms Oramas said, and that 2,167 licences had been cancelled so far as a result.

Havana residents have complained in recent months about a lack of transport options. Some drivers said they hoped that by bringing transport to a halt they might be able to pressure the government to revise the measures.

However, Transport Minister Adel Yzquierdo said “good news for our Havana is that at the end of December and start of January 400 new microbuses that the state has acquired abroad will be arriving”.

The Caribbean island would also soon receive 90 new buses, he said.

Cuba’s broader set of rules on the private sector that went into effect yesterday has sparked concerns it is backtracki­ng on market reforms necessary to help boost its ailing economy.

Entreprene­urs and economists cheered on Wednesday when the government announced it was lifting two of the most heavily criticised restrictio­ns that would cap restaurant seating at 50.

 ?? AP ?? A bicycle taxi driver gives a ride to women in Havana.
AP A bicycle taxi driver gives a ride to women in Havana.

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