Havana authorities cover garbage pile with sacks to block photos

Employees at a state warehouse in Havana's Nuevo Vedado have covered a fence with sacks to stop neighbors from photographing a large garbage pile next to a bust of Jose Marti and the Cuban flag. Journalist Yoani Sanchez of 14ymedio reports the waste accumulates weekly near the facility supplying rationed market goods. The action aims to prevent images from spreading on social media and WhatsApp.

At the corner of Factor and Conill streets in Havana's Nuevo Vedado, employees at the state warehouse have hung sacks over the perimeter fence. According to Yoani Sanchez in 14ymedio, the order targets a massive garbage pile that grows weekly there, visible alongside a bust of the Apostle Jose Marti and the Cuban flag in the gardens of the rationed market goods depot.

From upper floors of a nearby building, the view remains clear: Marti's head sculpture reached by an unused stone path, the flag's blue stripes and red triangle, and just meters away, torn bags, soggy cardboard, and plastic spilling onto the sidewalk.

Sanchez notes flies buzzing freely and a decaying smell rising to windows. Officials appear more focused on blocking photos that could spread via WhatsApp and social media, potentially contradicting the official narrative, than on cleaning the site.

The piece, first published in Spanish by 14ymedio and translated by Havana Times on April 8, 2026, underscores prioritizing image concealment over addressing the waste issue.

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Dawn scene in Havana: anti-government graffiti on a wall labeled 'Down with the dictatorship!' being erased by forensic authorities amid Cuba's crackdowns.
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Anti-government graffiti proliferates in Cuba despite crackdowns

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In Cuba, graffiti against the “dictatorship” and Communist Party keeps appearing in public spaces, despite forensic teams photographing and erasing it before dawn. Authorities have detained people for such acts, including ten Panamanians in February, amid recent protests over electricity and food. The Cuban Observatory of Conflicts recorded 42 cases in February 2026.

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Cuban health authorities warn of serious public health effects from indiscriminate garbage burning in Havana. This practice, carried out by both residents and municipal workers, produces toxic smoke affecting densely populated neighborhoods near hospitals and schools. Local government and medical centers have issued alerts on respiratory, neurological, and cancer risks.

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Fabiana del Valle, a 42-year-old Cuban artist, shares in her diary how the government's declaration of a 'state of war' has deepened daily hardships on the island. Following the capture of Venezuela's president early in 2026 and a Washington ultimatum, Cuba grapples with severe shortages of food, electricity, and medicine. Del Valle voices the exhaustion of ordinary citizens caught in geopolitical tensions.

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Following Wednesday's collapse of Cuba's National Electric System due to a failure at the Matanzas-based Antonio Guiteras power plant, residents in this eastern city face prolonged outages exceeding 30 hours, forcing a reorganization of daily life amid growing resignation.

 

 

 

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