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<title>BROOMSTOFLY - Cuba</title>
<link>https://broomstofly.com/?qa=qa/cuba</link>
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<title>The regime’s priorities and the real, urgent needs of the Cuban people.</title>
<link>https://broomstofly.com/?qa=115/the-regimes-priorities-and-the-real-urgent-needs-cuban-people</link>
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<figure><img src="https://broomstofly.com/king-include/uploads/2026/03/628445-IMG_4253.jpeg" width="800" height="535"/></figure>
The Cuban regime has poured tens of billions of dollars, estimates range from $13&amp;amp;ndash;24 billion in recent decades, with some plans alone costing $11&amp;amp;ndash;19 billion into building and expanding ~85,000 hotel rooms, mostly through military-controlled entities like GAESA and Gaviota. These luxury projects, often empty (occupancy hovering around 21&amp;amp;ndash;30%, with many hotels at half or less capacity), sit as symbols of misplaced priorities while the Cuban people endure daily suffering.&lt;br /&gt;
In stark contrast, stabilizing and modernizing the entire national electricity grid aging, oil-dependent, and collapsing repeatedly (like the full nationwide blackouts in 2024&amp;amp;ndash;2026) would cost roughly $8&amp;amp;ndash;10 billion, according to energy experts and analysts. That&amp;amp;rsquo;s a fraction of what the regime has funneled into tourism infrastructure over the same period.&lt;br /&gt;
Yet year after year, the government allocates massive shares of state investment (often 32&amp;amp;ndash;37%, sometimes 11 times more than health and education combined) to hotels and related projects, while energy gets a tiny slice (around 12% or less in many recent years). The result? Chronic blackouts lasting 15&amp;amp;ndash;20+ hours a day, spoiled food, non-functional hospitals, no water pumping, halted industry, and a vicious cycle that even scares away the tourists the hotels were built for.&lt;br /&gt;
This isn&amp;amp;rsquo;t about external pressures, it&amp;amp;rsquo;s a clear, deliberate choice by the regime. The leadership prioritizes flashy, revenue-generating (but failing) projects that benefit insiders, military conglomerates, and foreign partners over the basic needs of ~10.9 million Cubans (living in the country): reliable electricity, food security, medicine, and dignity in daily life.&lt;br /&gt;
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The disconnect is glaring and tragic: while the regime hoards cash (Gaviota alone reportedly sitting on billions in accounts) and builds empty towers, ordinary Cubans are left in literal darkness. Redirecting even a portion of those tourism billions to the grid could have prevented much of this preventable misery. Stable power isn&amp;amp;rsquo;t a luxury, it&amp;amp;rsquo;s the foundation for everything else. The regime&amp;amp;rsquo;s bad decisions continue to widen the gap between its priorities and the real, urgent needs of the Cuban people.&lt;br /&gt;
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&lt;a href=&quot;./?qa=tag/Cuba&quot;&gt;#Cuba&lt;/a&gt; &lt;a href=&quot;./?qa=tag/Blackouts&quot;&gt;#Blackouts&lt;/a&gt; &lt;a href=&quot;./?qa=tag/RegimePriorities&quot;&gt;#RegimePriorities&lt;/a&gt; &lt;a href=&quot;./?qa=tag/CubaLibre&quot;&gt;#CubaLibre&lt;/a&gt; &lt;a href=&quot;./?qa=tag/SOScuba&quot;&gt;#SOScuba&lt;/a&gt;</description>
<category>Cuba</category>
<guid isPermaLink="true">https://broomstofly.com/?qa=115/the-regimes-priorities-and-the-real-urgent-needs-cuban-people</guid>
<pubDate>Sun, 22 Mar 2026 18:42:31 +0000</pubDate>
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