
Cuba Restores Power After 29-Hour Blackout Amid U.S. Oil Blockade
HuffPost
In addition to cutting off oil sales to Cuba, U.S. President Donald Trump has escalated his rhetoric against the Communist-run island, saying on Monday he could do anything he wanted with the country.
HAVANA, March 17 (Reuters) - Cuba has reconnected its power grid on Tuesday and brought online its largest oil-fired power plant, energy officials said, putting an end to a nationwide blackout that lasted more than 29 hours amid a U.S. move to choke off the island’s fuel supply.
After the country’s 10 million people had been plunged into darkness overnight, the Caribbean island’s national power grid came fully back online by 6:11 p.m. (2211 GMT). However, officials said power shortages may continue because not enough electricity was being generated.
In addition to cutting off oil sales to Cuba, U.S. President Donald Trump has escalated his rhetoric against the Communist-run island, saying on Monday he could do anything he wanted with the country.
A U.S. State Department official blamed the Cuban government for the grid collapse, calling blackouts a “symptom of the failing regime’s incompetence.”
Cuban President Miguel Diaz-Canel fired back at Washington, criticizing its “almost daily public threats against Cuba.”













