Guantanamo, Cuba Has Its Shanties Too
June 26, 2013
Rosa Martínez
HAVANA TIMES — According to Isbel Diaz Torres, the writer of one of 
Havana Times' diaries I enjoy reading the most, Indalla is a shantytown 
located in the very heart of the Cuban capital which not even the 
president of its municipality knew existed.
I do not live in the capital. In fact, I live in the province which is 
furthest from Havana, in my beloved Guantanamo.
Though some refer to my province as "Cuba's Cinderella", my city is 
really not much different from other provincial capitals around the 
country, with the possible exception of Havana, Santiago de Cuba, the 
second most important city on the island, or, say, Matanzas.
Like most of the country, Guantanamo is still recovering from the 
effects of Cuba's Special Period, a crisis which lasted far too long and 
damaged a good part of the provinces' economic infrastructure.
It is also suffering the effects of a centralized economy that hasn't 
yet been able to address the needs of the population, particularly of 
those populations in the regions furthest from the capital.
Here in Guantanamo there are many Indallas, and I imagine all provinces 
have at least one shanty neighborhood of this nature – areas of the city 
where poverty, despair and hopelessness reach veritable extremes.
I myself live in a Indalla, surrounded by shabby, makeshift houses that 
threaten to collapse at any moment, by people with a high rate of 
alcoholism, unemployment, delinquency and all forms of violence.
I don't know whether we need an outbreak of cholera to draw a government 
authority to this neighborhood which even the gods have forsaken. I 
don't know whether the houses here need to collapse entirely for their 
inhabitants to finally get some kind of aid (and it would be hard to 
imagine such a situation, for these houses are like trailers, assembled 
and taken apart with relative ease).
What I am certain of is that this Indalla, like the one in Havana, 
doesn't need the government to come and evict its residents. On the 
contrary, what this neighborhood needs is for the government to include 
it in its development plans, for it to make building materials 
available, at reasonable prices which the population can afford, and 
thus oblige people to construct homes with basic living conditions.
Source: "Guantanamo, Cuba Has Its Shanties Too - Havana Times.org" - 
http://www.havanatimes.org/?p=95403
 
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