The CubanEstanys Rodríguez, who had previously planted himself in the ruler's residenceMiguel Diaz-Canel fordemand better living conditions for his daughter, attacked the regime again this Wednesday, but this time from the government headquarters in the municipality of Marianao, inHavana.
The young woman, accompanied by her two-and-a-half-year-old little Kimberly, declared in a broadcast on: “Here no leader has had his house fall down or go through work”.
In this way, the 20-year-old girl criticized the government's indolence regarding her case:a mother whose pension does not meet the needs of her underweight daughter.
"I came to receive the answer that you have not yet given me"he said at one point in the video.
Later she explained that she is tired of the regime's evasions and reiterated that in recent daysheaded to the ruler's residence due to lack of response about a kitchen which, according to her, was assigned to her as a pensioner, but she has not yet received.
For the same reason, this Wednesday he stood at the government headquarters in Marianao and emphasized that “they haven't solved anything”.
At the same time, Rodríguez denounced the bureaucratism that characterizes the Cuban government: “Everything is delay and paperwork, here they don't help at all, I'm already tired”.
Last Monday, the young woman told the program "Reporters", on the YouTube channel Universo Increíble, that the day he went to Díaz-Canel's house,His daughter only had an instant mango soda for breakfast. because I didn't even have money to buy a piece of fruit.
He warned at that moment that the regime owed him a kitchen that they had not given him.
Furthermore, he reported that the only thing he has received from the government has been threats and not food.
The young woman, very angry, said that she was tired of having to work for herself and especially her two and a half year old daughter.
Rodríguez was one of the Cuban mothers with her children whoThey stood last Thursday in front of the residence of ruler Miguel Díaz-Canel to demand housing, medicine and food, stating that the country's authorities "do not solve anything."
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