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After a second night without electricity | Hurricane Oscar hits Cuba

(Havana) The hurricane Oscar made landfall on Sunday evening in eastern Cuba, faced for three days with a giant power outage that the authorities are struggling to resolve.


Posted at 8:03 a.m.

Updated at 7:19 p.m.

Jordane BERTRAND

Agence -Presse

Oscar made landfall on Sunday in eastern Cuba, with winds approaching 130 km/h, the US Hurricane Center (NHC) announced.

According to this source, Oscar fell on the Cuban coast in Guantanamo province, near the town of Baracoa, on the far eastern tip of the island, at 5:50 p.m. (Eastern time).

“The hurricane Oscar made landfall near Baracao,” the Cuban Meteorological Institute (Insmet) confirmed on its Facebook page. “The Maisi Point weather station is reporting sustained winds of 80 km/h and a gust of 116 km/h at 5:25 p.m. local time (5:25 p.m. Eastern Time).”

Oscar hits Cuba in the midst of an energy crisis, with the island preparing to spend a third night without power due to a breakdown on Friday in the main thermoelectric plant located in the west of the country, which caused the complete shutdown of the network.

PHOTO NORLYS PEREZ, REUTERS

For three months, Cubans have suffered from power cuts that have become more and more frequent, with a national energy deficit of 30%.

Authorities in the east of the island are “already working hard to protect the population and economic resources, given the imminent hurricane Oscar », assured President Miguel Diaz-Canel in a message published Saturday evening on X.

The government hopes to restore electricity Monday evening.

“We can talk about the fact that between tomorrow Monday morning, afternoon, or evening,” service will be restored for the majority of Cubans, indicated the Minister of Energy and Mines, Vicente de la O Levy.

A few hundred thousand Cubans were able to benefit from a few hours of electricity on Sunday, before the entire electrical system was paralyzed again, according to the national electricity company (UNE).

“A new disconnection of the national electricity system (SEN) has occurred. Restoration work will resume immediately,” the Ministry of Energy and Mines said on X late Sunday afternoon.

PHOTO NORLYS PEREZ, REUTERS

Street lights illuminate a Havana neighborhood as the Cuban government said Saturday it had made progress in gradually restoring electric service across the island.

“Really serious”

Thursday, on the eve of the general blackout, the Cuban president announced that the island was in a situation of “energy emergency” faced with difficulties in purchasing the fuel necessary to power its power stations, due to the strengthening of the embargo that Washington has imposed on the island since 1962.

“It’s really serious, there is no life here, this country can’t take it anymore,” laments Serguei Castillo, a 68-year-old mason. “For two days, I have only been eating kibble, pizza and other junk,” he told AFP, angrily.

“If your electricity is cut for four or five hours, it’s still okay, but this… it’s a lack of respect for the people. I have no other way to describe what is happening to us,” says Isabel, 51, who refuses to reveal her last name. “The country paralyzed for three days is too much!” “.

“Destroyed”

Luis Jiménez, a 22-year-old student, also wonders about how Cubans will survive in the days to come, and about the future of his country.

“If the situation is not resolved quickly, I don’t know how we will survive,” he said. “It’s really not possible anymore. It’s a country in ruins, destroyed.”

For three months, Cubans have suffered from power cuts that have become more and more frequent, with a national energy deficit of 30%. On Thursday, this deficit had reached 50%.

In recent weeks, in several provinces, outages have lasted more than twenty hours a day.

PHOTO ADALBERTO ROQUE, AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE

Cubans queue for bread during the second day of the national blackout in Havana, October 19, 2024.

In Cuba, electricity is produced by eight dilapidated thermoelectric power plants, sometimes broken down or under maintenance, as well as several floating power plants leased to Turkish companies, and generators.

Power outages were one of the triggers for the historic protests of July 11, 2021.

In September 2022, the island had already experienced a widespread “blackout” after the passage of the hurricane Ian which had struck the west of the island. Completely restoring electricity took several days in the capital and several weeks across the island.

PHOTO NORLYS PEREZ, ARCHIVES REUTERS

People walk on a street near a streetlight as the Cuban government said Saturday it has made progress in gradually restoring electric service on the island, in Havana, Cuba, October 19, 2024.

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