HomeAmericaCubans queue for water in Havana amid fuel and power crisis

Cubans queue for water in Havana amid fuel and power crisis

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HAVANA, March 20 (Reuters) - ‌Residents across the Cuban capital hauled buckets ​and lined up for water from tanker trucks as a combination ⁠of fuel shortages and power grid instability left thousands of taps dry.

State water utility Aguas de La Habana confirmed ​that pumping schedules and supply operations have been disrupted by a ‌lack of electricity. 

"This area is now having water problems. People are hauling water and waiting for the water truck," said ⁠resident Lazaro Noblet, while pushing a small ⁠handcart loaded with containers.

"Since oil is not coming into the country, there is no pumping, because that system runs on electricity."

The energy crunch follows a spike in U.S. ‌pressure on Havana since the January capture of Venezuelan President ⁠Nicolas Maduro, Cuba's primary benefactor. 

U.S. President ‌Donald Trump has since cut Venezuelan ​oil shipments to Cuba and threatened tariffs on other suppliers, strangling the island's fragile power infrastructure.

For many, however, ‌the struggle is not new. "Our problem has ​existed since 2021, and ⁠now it is 2026," said 58-year-old Maria de ‌Jesus Rusindo, who has ⁠spent years carrying heavy containers into her home.

In other districts, Alfonso Pedro Gonzalez checked an empty roof tank before turning ​a dry faucet. ‌He must boil the small amount of water he manages ⁠to collect from trucks.

(Reporting by ​Alien Fernandez and Anett Rios, Writing by Natalia Siniawski, ​Editing by Rod Nickel)

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