Cuban influencer Yessy World, excited: "Cuba is about to become the zombie island."

The Cuban influencer Yessy World expressed her concern on TikTok about the critical situation on the island, describing it as a "zombie island" due to the prolonged blackouts and the economic crisis.


The Cuban influencer Yessy World has shown her deep concern and pain for the crisis the island is going through, through a video posted on her TikTok profile, @yessyworldlives.

In the recording, the young woman expressed with anguish her despair over the current situation in Cuba and the uncertain future her family is facing.

"Cuba is about to become a zombie island, and that worries me because my family is there," she expressed almost in tears, while describing the harsh reality that many Cubans are living, marked by uncertainty, lack of electricity, and the economic crisis.

The young woman, visibly affected, expressed the desperation felt by thousands of citizens on the island who are trying to "survive" amid prolonged blackouts and a deep crisis.

"I don't know what is going to happen, I don't know how people are going to survive because what is really happening in my country is survival," he added.

Additionally, the woman mentioned that she had recently spoken with her mother, who lives in Cuba. "I just talked to my mom, and she told me that she has never seen anything like this in her life," she said, reflecting the seriousness of the current situation on the island.

The young woman described how the lack of electricity and the constant hardships are creating a state of "desperation" that could lead to even more critical situations.

"I am truly worried, people in the dark and so many ugly things can happen, the desperation," concluded the Cuban in her heart-wrenching message, which has touched the hearts of many of her followers and those who have seen the video.

This type of personal testimony is becoming increasingly common on social media, where Cubans both inside and outside the country raise their voices to denounce the critical situation being experienced on the island.

Blackouts, the shortage of food and medicine, and uncertainty have become the daily life of millions of people, creating an environment of frustration and hopelessness.

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Yare Grau

Originally from Cuba, but I live in Spain. I studied Social Communication at the University of Havana and later graduated in Audiovisual Communication from the University of Valencia. I am currently part of the CiberCuba team as a writer in the Entertainment section.


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