USA TODAY US Edition

Thousands of ‘fed up’ Cubans protest regime amid food shortages

- Elinor Aspegren

Thousands of Cubans took part in protests around the country Sunday, demonstrat­ing against food and medicine shortages amid the coronaviru­s pandemic in what has been said to be the biggest anti-government protest in 30 years.

Protestors, many of them young people, chanted “We want freedom” and “We want vaccines” as they marched on Havana, the island’s capital. Cuba is going through its worst economic crisis in decades, exacerbate­d by a surge in coronaviru­s cases coupled with a low vaccinatio­n rate.

“We are fed up with the queues, the shortage. That’s why I’m here,” one middle-age protester told The Associated Press. He declined to identify himself for fear of being arrested later.

Outside of Havana, hundreds of people marched through cities like San Antonio de los Baños and Palma Soriano, and throughout the province of Artemisa. Protests even extended as far as the U.S. in Miami, which has a sizeable Cuban and Cuban-American population.

Although many people tried to take out their cellphones and broadcast the protests live, Cuban authoritie­s shut down internet service throughout the afternoon. Officers also charged protesters, barraging them with tear gas and arresting some.

“As if pandemic outbreaks had not existed all over the world, the CubanAmeri­can mafia, paying very well on social networks to influencer­s and YouTubers, has created a whole campaign ... and has called for demonstrat­ions across the country,” President Miguel Díaz-Canel told reporters.

In an impromptu televised address, he blamed the protests on U.S. efforts to provoke a social uprising by tightening the embargo and warned that protesters would face a strong response.

“We are not going to hand over the sovereignt­y or the independen­ce of the people,” he said, reported the Miami Herald.

In Miami, Mayor Francis Suarez said at a news conference Sunday that “Cubans are worthy and ready to rule themselves without tyranny.”

“It can end today and it must end today,” he said, reported NBC-6. “The implicatio­ns of this moment can mean freedom for millions of people in the hemisphere, from Nicaraguan­s and Venezuelan­s and so many more.”

 ?? RAMON ESPINOSA/AP ?? Police clash with anti-government protesters Sunday in Havana.
RAMON ESPINOSA/AP Police clash with anti-government protesters Sunday in Havana.

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