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He speaks Cuban from Cienfuegos: “I don't want food, I want freedom”

The lady considered that living in Cuba is sad, depressing, painful and bitter.


A Cuban woman, from the province of Cienfuegos, stated that she disagreed with the Castro regime: “I don't want food. Freedom is what I want and a total change.”

“The life of a Cuban, of a mother, of a father, is painful and stormy. "You go to bed thinking about tomorrow, about what you are going to take to the cauldrons, and you don't rest mentally, physically or emotionally," he told the media.Martí News.

She considers that Cuba is the most critical country in the world and living in this nation: “It is the most depressing thing there is. It's sad, it's painful, it's bitter."

His feeling is the same as that of many who survive on the island, which is whyOn March 17, Cuba expressed again, and spontaneously, the desire for change.

However, this Cienfuegos resident admitted that in her town, although there is a desire to take to the streets, there is also a lot of fear.

“I see it very well done, that gives me satisfaction even though it is not done in my town because what there is is fear nothing more, because people here want to demonstrate but what they have is fear of repression, of being taken to prison, of "Let them disappear, let them fine you."

The lady said that as long as those who are in power are in power, there will be no solution in Cuba: “I would like this to change completely. But that has to be a radical change of ruler, not like they do in Santiago where they are carrying food carts to cover their mouths”.

This lady's voice joins many others who, like her, are tired of the crisis that the country is experiencing.

That's whyOn March 17, the people took to the streets and protest against the Cuban regime and its disastrous management of the economic, political and social crisis that plunges the population into misery and despair.

This new wave of demonstrations had the Veguita de Galo neighborhood of Santiago de Cuba as the epicenter, but it spread to different parts of the country.

The Cuban Observatory of Human Rights (OCDH) blamed the Castro regime of creating and maintaining the chaotic situation that the nation is experiencing, which was considered the trigger for last Sunday's demonstrations.

In the VI Report on the State of Social Rights in Cuba, the organization denounced that "88% of Cubans live in extreme poverty, 13% more than in 2022."

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