The Cuban Prime Minister Manuel Marrero inaugurated a new hotel in Cuba, the Meliá Trinidad Peninsula, five star category.
The inauguration of the hotel takes place at a time of deep economic crisis and a few weeks before the entry into force of a group of policies that will further impoverish Cubans. The new measures are generating bad public opinion about the management of the State and Marrero knows it.
"In Trinidad the importance of tourism development and its impact on economic and social life, manifesting itself in the generation of employment and the substantial increase in new economic actors," said the official on social network X.
His publication tries to highlight the need for the government to create new hotels to get the country out of the crisis. Marrero, in order to convince his followers, did not hesitate to assure that the new hotel will bring changes to the lives of the people of Sancti Spiritus.
"As part of the 510th anniversary of the founding of the Village, we inaugurated the Meliá Trinidad Peninsula Hotel, a facility that will mark a before and after in the tourist development of this municipality," said the prime minister.
He Hotel Meliá Trinidad Peninsula It is the largest resort in the southern tourist hub. It is near the Valley of the Ingenios, Cultural Heritage of Humanity.
The resort has 401 rooms, between standard and The level. It is only for adults over 18 years of age. It has seven bars, seven restaurants and numerous venues for events, meetings, conferences and parties.
The image of cuba that the regime and its commercial partner try to transmit Melia, to attract tourism to the country, is increasingly distant from the reality that is experienced at street level.
On the island, inequalities in access to resources and services of all kinds are growing, extreme poverty is increasing, homeless people are multiplying and cases of violent robberies are reported every day.
The context of insecurity is growing but the government denies it and focuses on the opening of hotels by the sea, in all-inclusive mode, to keep tourists isolated from social reality and convey a false idea of paradise in the Caribbean, which gives them allows us to continue earning dollars whose final destination is not seen by the people.
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