LIFE

Cuba Students Sit In as Blackouts Rewrite the Social Contract

About 30 students held a rare sit-in on the steps of Havana’s university to protest power outages, internet outages, and remote classes. Their action highlighted a bigger struggle over who gets a voice during Cuba’s frequent blackouts.

Umbrella on the First Step

At ten in the morning, it began with one student, an umbrella, and a backpack, settling onto the first step of the University of Havana’s iconic staircase. The stone was open to the day, and the attention it drew, and that was the point. The sit-in was peaceful and discreet, but striking for its rarity in Cuba’s public life.

The student was answering a call that had spread via social media, one that both the university and the official Federation of University Students tried to discourage. Then, slowly, others joined. And alongside them came another gathering, larger in number: faculty and administrators, plus intelligence personnel from the Interior Ministry known as State Security.

In Cuba, even a staircase can become a parliament, if only for a morning.

The everyday problem that pushed students outside is painfully unromantic. Electricity. Connectivity. The mechanics of getting an education done when the country’s systems keep stalling. Blackouts have grown longer, and when the power goes out, mobile coverage and phone service often go with it. Public transport has nearly disappeared, and many public services, including universities, have been forced to operate in distance mode.

This is the policy problem: distance education assumes reliable electricity and internet. But the students were facing the exact opposite.

Cuba’s energy crisis is widely seen as fuel-related, with severe shortages and frequent blackouts. The government blames a major fuel shortage and tighter U.S. oil restrictions for the blackouts and service rationing, such as transportation. The crisis has cut in-person classes and made internet access harder, forcing many services to go online.

Student protest at Havana University, Cuba. EFE/ Ernesto Mastrascusa

When Dialogue Feels Like a Closed Door

The first wave of complaints stayed tightly academic. A student pressed a dean with questions. EFE was able to follow: in English, “How many hours of electricity did you have last week? And do you have a connection when they cut the power?” Another student told EFE: “Many students from the provinces haven’t been able to turn anything in because there is no connectivity.”

But what began as a dispute over coursework widened into a dispute over voice.

The discussion went beyond assignments to focus on how students can raise issues and join debates over solutions and decisions. A young woman told officials, “The paths to reach the Higher Education Ministry are blocked.” Another student said, “This sit-in, I’m afraid, is a last resort.”

The trouble is that “last resort” is not only about impatience. It is about a slow erosion of trust.

Students said their loss of confidence in both the university and the student federation began last June, when their discomfort over a steep rise in mobile tariffs by the state phone company was not handled as they wanted. That moment did not vanish. It became precedent, the kind of students carry forward when new crises arrive, and the official answer is again to wait, again to accept less.

Similar tensions have been visible before, most recently last June, in an unusual student protest over increased internet and mobile costs at the University of Havana, showing that connectivity is not a luxury in a distance-learning reality but a basic condition for participation.

By last week, students felt sidelined and believed decisions were being made from above. They felt ignored and thought decisions were made without them. They created alternative online debate groups and then called for the sit-in. The university and federation quickly called the initiative a fake and said official dialogue channels were in place. But what counts as a legitimate complaint, and who gets to define the proper way to complain?

Student protest at Havana University, Cuba. EFE/ Ernesto Mastrascusa

A Minister’s Blame, a Student’s Reply

The officials came down the steps, too. EFE reported that University President, Miriam Nicado García, and the first vice minister of Higher Education, Modesto Ricardo Gómez, approached the students where they were gathered. After nearly two hours of negotiation, the students, who did not want to speak to the media, agreed to move to another location to continue the dialogue.

Gómez tried to end the sit-in by appealing to the students’ sense of order and loyalty. “This is not going to improve the problems we have. Why this, gentlemen, kids, when my whole life has been to educate you?” he asked.

A student replied with a sentence that governments fear because it’s simple and powerful. “Because you haven’t listened from the first moment. That’s the answer you have.” Mez told the media that authorities had “at no moment” dismissed “any kind of dialogue” with university students. He also framed the crisis in the language of siege, blaming what he called the U.S. oil blockade for an “extremely difficult” situation, saying it is “really crushing an entire society” and calling it “a genocide against all the Cuban people,” according to EFE. He added, “We don’t know how far this is going to go,” referring to “U.S. aggression.”

Those claims sit inside a wider reality that multiple outlets have described as an energy system buckling under fuel scarcity and political pressure. Cuban officials have linked Cuba’s fuel shortages to U.S. moves that constricted oil flows and contributed to widespread outages and rationing.

But the students weren’t debating geopolitics on the steps. They were talking about real-life effects: the hours without electricity, the missing transport, the lost connection that makes remote learning feel like an order they can’t follow. The sit-in started as an academic complaint and grew into a protest about having a voice.

That’s why this moment matters. Not because a few dozen students can fix a national fuel crisis, but because their questions show the pressure point: when institutions can’t provide basic services, it’s hard for them to ask for patience, silence, or trust.

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