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Cuba struggles to get oxygen to the sick, vaccines to the healthy

Havana, Cuba
Reuters

Cuba has turned to the military to provide oxygen amid a surge of the coronavirus even as doctors rush to administer locally developed vaccines to the population.

The government announced on Sunday that the Caribbean island’s main oxygen plant had broken down in the midst of a Delta variant-driven coronavirus surge that has resulted in record numbers of cases and deaths, swamping some provincial health systems.

Cuba Havana coronavirus

People walk in downtown amid concerns about the spread of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19), Havana, Cuba, on 3rd August. PICTURE: Reuters/Alexandre Meneghini/File photo.

Cuban President Miguel Diaz-Canel toured a military unit producing and transporting sparse oxygen to COVID-19 patients, state-run media reported on Tuesday. 

Diaz-Canel was seen on television inspecting three mobile military plants, including a recently donated Russian one, that produce oxygen and talking to military helicopter pilots ferrying the product to hospitals in various western and central provinces, presumably in the nick of time to save patients gasping for air. 

“Your work is decisive,” he said.

Last week similar scenes from eastern Cuba were broadcast, featuring smaller oxygen-producing equipment on military trucks and the filled oxygen tanks transported by various types of vehicles to hospitals, but without the President. 

Cuba reported 9,800 cases and 68 deaths on Monday.

Over the last 15 days there have been an average of 8,891 cases per days and 82 deaths.

As of Monday Cuba had reported a total of 536,609 cases and 4,023 deaths since the pandemic began.

The Cuban leader, who is also head of the Communist Party, was accompanied on Monday by the head of the armed forces, Alvaro Lopez Miera, who was recently sanctioned by the United States for what it charged was his role in putting down protests more than a month ago in the country.

The health crisis, on top of economic woes, has resulted in a scarcity of consumer goods and frayed nerves in the Communist-run country. On 11th July tens of thousands took to the streets in protest, the most serious unrest since the early days of the 1959 Revolution.

Cuba’s gross domestic product contracted by a rate of 10.9 per cent last year, and by an additional two per cent through June compared with the same period last year.

Some residents and medical staff have taken to social media complaining of treatment in a land that prides itself on the quality of its free health system.

As the country struggles to cope with the surge it is also engaged in a campaign to inoculate the entire 11.2 million population with two locally produced vaccines, Abdala and Soberana 2, which it claims have efficacy rates above 90 per cent.

The country has fully vaccinated more than 3.2 million residents with another two million expected to get a final shot before September and more than 95 per cent of the entire country before the end of the year.

 

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