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Cubans complain about the service at the Havana bus terminal: "It's a cemetery"

The forum members said that the terminal no longer belongs to them.

Terminal de Ómnibus © Facebook / Jorge Raúl Campos Díaz
The terminal of all Photo © Facebook / Jorge Raúl Campos Díaz

Dozens of Cubans complained about the service at the Havana bus terminal, where coronavirus restrictions are apparently here to stay: "It's a cemetery," they say.

In the comments to a publication by the Internet user identified inFacebook Like Jorge Raúl Campos Díaz, who posts photos of the remodeled facilities, the forum members said that the terminal no longer belongs to them.

"A clean and remodeled terminal, which does not belong to us, closed tight, only allowed entry topassengers"The COVID protocols are here to stay, as indelible proof of the immobility that characterizes us," said one.

"The meaning" of the terminal as a public good has been changed, considered another.

Publication inFacebook

"It's a cemetery," said a forum member who remembers that this space, and its cafes, was used by dozens of people in Havana for various social purposes, such as saying goodbye to relatives from the interior of the country.

"Terminals are living places, in movement where people with different destinies meet. Some go and are fired, others arrive and are received. If this brilliant "local" does not meet any of these premises, it is not a terminal. It is a shame that this facility, which was built with all the requirements, is wasted. I passed by there in September 2019 and it was bustling at 5 am. with cafes open withvaried offers, the bathrooms working, the murmur of people, the loudspeakers, the luggage... in short, a terminal and not a brilliant museum where they have also adopted the bad habit of the airport: the companions outside. We are blocked by our bad decisions and the inability to think," stressed a user of the social network.

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