Havana/A graffiti with marine motifs became the impromptu canvas on which this Saturday dawned a sign against the Cuban ruler. In Guanabacoa, Havana, someone painted “Díaz Canel Singoo”, one of the phrases that, most frequently, serves to express the discomfort of Cubans. The slogan was written about colorful drawings managed by the False Corral Gallery, located at number 259 of the street of the same name. Between fish, octopus and reefs, the insult to the Cuban president stood out before the eyes of those who passed through the place.
“That children’s painting did not have been in that wall that was previously ugly and worse,” says ’14ymedio’ a neighbor
“That children’s painting had not been in that wall that was previously ugly and worse,” he tells 14ymedio A neighbor. “I immediately realized a man and a woman who began to make calls came to come to cover the poster.” The two people inspected the area and stayed on the sidewalk waiting for the brigade that, traditionally, cover with paint the anti -government posters. Police experts probably also arrive to try to take traces at the scene.
“This is very tense with the blackouts, surely they painted it in the dark because we had two nights without sleep due to lack of current,” explains the resident in the vicinity. In Guanabacoa, a municipality with a low -income population, protests against the electricity and water deficit have multiplied in recent years. With cacerolazos and the closure of streets, the neighbors have shown their fed up with a crisis that worsens more every day. “They will have to put a guard on each wall,” summarizes a seller who approached the painted of false corral in which, between a whale and a shark, three words challenged the regime this Saturday.
