Cubans install banned Starlink dishes despite Etecsa monopoly

On rooftops in Havana, Matanzas and Santa Clara, affluent Cubans are secretly installing Starlink dishes to access stable internet, bypassing the state ban and Etecsa's monopoly. Professionals like programmers rely on smuggled equipment powered by solar batteries amid blackouts and unreliable connections. Elon Musk confirmed on March 16 that the service works in Cuba, though it is not authorized.

Cubans evade customs by disassembling Starlink dishes and hiding them in televisions or computer towers, sometimes bribing officials with $20 bills. Once inside, they install them in spots with clear sky view but camouflaged, such as fake air-conditioning boxes or painted gray. They connect to backup batteries or small solar systems to withstand blackouts.

Damian, a programmer from Matanzas working for foreign clients, told 14ymedio: “With Etecsa I couldn’t sustain a full meeting. Everything would drop. Now I pay the subscription with help from my brother in Miami. It’s expensive, yes, but it lets me work.” Other professionals share this need for job survival.

Elon Musk tweeted on March 16, 2026: “It works in Cuba, it’s just not allowed to be sold there.” Many activate accounts in Mexico or the US for roaming use on the island, though not a long-term fix.

Costs are steep: kits priced $300-450 in the US or Mexico fetch $1,300-1,800 on Cuba's black market, plus $90-150 monthly fees via resellers. An ecosystem of resale and shared Wi-Fi networks has emerged, despite government confiscations.

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Cuban workers repair power infrastructure in Nuevitas after nationwide blackout, with dark Havana skyline and microgrids in background.
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Cuba launches recovery after second nationwide blackout in a week

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Cuba has begun restoring power following a nationwide grid collapse on Saturday evening—the second total blackout in less than a week and third major outage this month—affecting around 10 million people after a major power plant in Nuevitas failed. Officials established microgrids for essential services amid chronic fuel shortages and grid unreliability.

Amid Cuba's deepening energy crisis, including the March 4 national power collapse, Etecsa has rationed internet and phone services with time slots due to outages and fuel shortages. Reports from multiple provinces highlight widespread disruptions and limited restorations.

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Countries around the world are racing to create their own satellite internet networks similar to Starlink, driven by risks associated with dependence on the service controlled by Elon Musk. Starlink has provided crucial connectivity in modern warfare, but incidents like restrictions on Russian access during the Ukraine conflict have heightened concerns. Efforts include projects by the EU, China, and individual European nations to ensure sovereign control over military communications.

Cuba's Supreme People's Court Governing Council issued Opinion No. 475 on May 23, 2025, reaffirming that thefts from energy infrastructure amount to sabotage. Courts have imposed sentences exceeding ten years in prison in 100% of cases tried from January 2025 to the first quarter of 2026. These actions address the theft of components and fuel impacting the National Electrical System.

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The day after Cuba's National Power System collapsed on March 16, 2026—marking the sixth nationwide blackout in 18 months—Havana remained in darkness and paralysis. Independent journalist Yoani Sanchez details a city struggling with closed offices, powerless electric vehicles, and spotty internet on Tuesday, March 17.

Cuba's state-owned Unión Eléctrica (UNE) forecasts that 62% of the island will lose power simultaneously this Monday at peak demand. The energy crisis has deepened since mid-2024, worsening with the US oil blockade imposed in January. Nine of the country's 16 thermoelectric units are currently out of service.

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Cuba's National Electric System collapsed due to a failure at the Antonio Guiteras power plant, leaving more than half the country without power, from Pinar del Río to Camagüey. All of Havana remains in darkness following the incident on Wednesday.

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