Havana/Havana woke up this Saturday with an official event on 17th Street, in El Vedado, called hastily and with a discretion that contrasted with the massive demonstrations of Venezuelans spread throughout Latin
Havana/Concern about the desecration of graves and the inadequate handling of human remains in Cuban cemeteries is once again occupying public attention after recent complaints and testimonies collected in different cities in
Havana/This Saturday, while most of Cuba tries to survive amid blackouts, repression, disease and hunger, several citizens gathered in front of Havana hotels with the hope—or simply the need—to receive supposed economic
Havana/The epidemiological situation in Cuba is so serious that even an ally like Russia has been forced to issue a new international alert for its travelers. The embassy in Havana, citing a
Holguin/On a random street in Holguín, where the shade of the trees is little relief, a small improvised counter holds the new thermometer of the Cuban energy crisis: several bundles of charcoal
Matanzas/Working in Varadero is no longer a privilege for the thousands of employees of the largest tourist center in Cuba. For months now, getting to hotels every day has become a real
Havana/The market at 100 and Boyeros, one of the most important commercial lungs in Havana, woke up this Friday with a strange air, as if it had been suspended between the usual
Miami/The young Cuban Anyi Cabrales was about to reach the finish line of the american dreambut just three hours before becoming a U.S. citizen, she received a life-changing notification. His swearing-in ceremony