Unidentified interviewee in Spanish-language interview says Cuba’s problems are nationwide and calls for leaders to be replaced
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In a brief Spanish-language interview, an unidentified speaker described widespread hardships across Cuba — including power cuts, water shortages and food scarcity — rejected the U.S. embargo as the main cause and said the country’s current leaders must be changed.
An unidentified interviewee told a Spanish-language interviewer that the hardships affecting Cubans are widespread and not limited to Havana, saying the problems reach “Cuba entera.”
When asked who is responsible for the conditions — whether the Cuban government or the U.S. embargo — the interviewee replied, “No lo creo,” rejecting the embargo as the primary cause and alluding to internal economic problems including issues with small and medium enterprises (mipymes).
The interviewer listed specific crises — electricity cuts, a water crisis and food shortages — and asked what measures the government should take to improve conditions. After a brief hesitation, the interviewee said officials should be replaced, stating, "van a tener que cambiar a todos los que están dirigiendo este país." The speaker did not offer a detailed policy plan or identify particular officials by name.
The exchange in the short transcript records questions and general assertions but no formal proposals, votes or references to specific statutes or international agreements. There is no response on record from named government officials or further elaboration about how leadership change should occur.
Without named sources or documentary evidence in the transcript, claims about responsibility and remedies remain the interviewee’s assertions. The transcript captures public dissatisfaction and a call for leadership change but does not document policy recommendations, proposed actions, or corroborating details about the underlying causes.
