
From Our Own Correspondent Cuba's crisis deepens
Mar 28, 2026
William Dunbar, journalist on Georgian archaeological digs and a political purge; Laura Bicker, Beijing correspondent on China's cautious Middle East stance; Leila Malana Allen, British–Iranian commentator on muted Nowruz; Carine Torbey, Beirut reporter on renewed Lebanese violence; Will Grant, Havana correspondent on Cuba's blackouts and healthcare strain. They discuss blackouts, wartime trauma, China’s calculations, cultural resistance, and ancient human finds.
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Cuba's Public Criticism Breaks Longstanding Fear
- Cubans are losing ingrained fear of publicly criticising the state as the energy and economic crises deepen under a near-total US fuel blockade.
- Protests escalated to arson at a Communist Party HQ and international solidarity events brought batteries and solar panels to help locals cope.
Havana Family Cooking With Driftwood
- Brainy Hernandez cooks with driftwood after electricity and gas became unavailable, feeding his nine-year-old daughter rice brought home from school.
- He openly said he'd like Trump to 'take this place over' and shrugged at potential repercussions, citing his family's dire living conditions.
Leader Applauded Amid Widespread Shortages
- At the Grand Palacio de las Convenciones, Miguel Díaz-Canel received rapturous applause from an international solidarity coalition while many Cubans outside suffer blackouts.
- Visitors brought solar panels, batteries, food and medicines, highlighting a split between official events and everyday shortages.


