SAN LUIS POTOSÍ, Mexico.- This Friday, during a tour of the town of Calimete, in Matanzas, the ruler Miguel Díaz-Canel Bermúdez He called on Cubans to “be beautiful”, in the midst of a fateful scenario of food shortages and blackouts caused by the mismanagement of their Government.
Together with delegate Herly Sit Zulueta and residents of constituency 3 of the Calimete Popular Council, the representative of the regime, when referring to the work of the Jesús Sablón (Rabí) Moreno center, asked the workers of the center to support the system electroenergetic with the honeydew harvest to generate electricity and asked to face the “difficulties.”
“The family of the workers with whom they are developing the self-consumption They will have more food. So all of that is enhanced and if in each place we do things well, we are inspired by those good examples,” he said.
In your opinionthe country’s problems “no one will solve”: “We have to solve them.” In this regard, he stated: “You have to be handsome, you have to fight in very difficult circumstances,” a phrase that he often repeats to ask Cubans for “resistance” when the crisis suffocates citizens.
The governor, justifying the economic debacle and the shortages on the Island, added that every week they distribute “the little that was earned” and put forward “all the needs“, “all the demands that the country has.”
“I tell them that it is distressing because sometimes what goes into a week is not even enough to pay for a ship that has been there for days, that has the food for this week’s quota, or has the fuel that we need to generate more electricity,” he alleged just a week after collapse of the electroenergy system.
In his speech he did not relent in his efforts to blame the embargo of the situation in the country, and described the effect of the “blockade” as “very cruel.”
Without assuming his role in the crisis, he did nothing more than praise the work of the constituency delegate and “the potential of the people” and describe him as “heroic”, “talented”, “intelligent” after having abandoned those people, who in Guantánamo has suffered great losses after the passage of Hurricane Oscar.
This week, a Cuban resident in San Antonio del Sur, Guantánamo, complained to the governor that he was in charge of 29 children in the Special School during the hurricane through his area and no one came to rescue them.
“They left us alone there, 29 children. I had to evacuate the children, we almost couldn’t,” said the man from Guantanamo from one of the areas affected by Oscar.
The Cuban said that despite promising that they would send a rescue team, it did not happen and he himself had to rescue the children, who were suffering from hypothermia due to the sudden floods.
Díaz-Canel, not knowing how to deal with the complaint, responded that they had been taken to the Special School “precisely for evacuation” and that “what happens is that the phenomenon has surpassed it here.”