this post was submitted on 11 May 2026
1 points (100.0% liked)

Cuba

358 readers
1 users here now

Cuba


Community dedicated to discuss everything related to Cuba. Its culture, its language, its politics and its people.


Rules:

  1. Posts must be in Spanish or in English.
  2. Add a flair in the title of every post.

List of flairs:

[News] [Culture] [Discussion]
[Question] [Request] [Guide]

Cuba


Comunidad dedicada a discutir todo lo relacionado con Cuba. Su cultura, su idioma, su política y su pueblo.


Reglas:

  1. Las publicaciones deben estar en español o en inglés.
  2. Añadir una etiqueta en el título de cada publicación.

Lista de etiquetas:

[Noticias] [Cultura] [Discusión]
[Pregunta] [Petición] [Guía]

founded 4 years ago
MODERATORS
 

May 11, 2026

By Pramila Jayapal and Jonathan L. Jackson

Ms. Jayapal, of Washington’s Seventh Congressional District, and Mr. Jackson, of Illinois’s First Congressional District, are Democrats in the House of Representatives.

Alejandro, a premature baby born in Havana’s Eusebio Hernández Pérez maternity hospital, weighed only two pounds when we met him in April. We watched him as he lay in an incubator, one of the few in the building whose delicate electronic components hadn’t been damaged by the high-voltage electricity surges that follow nationwide blackouts. Far-reaching U.S. sanctions make importing replacement parts for the other, broken incubators nearly impossible.

Touring the hospital, we saw women in the final days of their pregnancies trudging up flights of stairs, the elevators inoperable without power. The hospital staff members struggle to get to work without fuel for their cars. During blackouts, doctors sometimes have to manually pump ventilators to keep babies alive. They say the hospital has managed to avoid an increase in infant mortality over the past several months, but other facilities around the country have not been so lucky. From 2018 to 2025, as U.S. sanctions grew more punitive, Cuba’s once-impressive infant mortality rate skyrocketed by 148 percent.

no comments (yet)
sorted by: hot top controversial new old
there doesn't seem to be anything here