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An Absurd Solution for Cubans' Breakfast, Lunch and Dinner    – Havana Times

With blackouts and little food, the State markets of Ciego de Avila open until midnight

In the opinion of the authorities, the night or “new type” markets are working well.

Cuban officialdom does not mention several obvious problems of this approach: blackouts, lack of products and corruption in the food sector of the province.

By 14ymedio

HAVANA TIMES – At least five state markets in the province of Ciego de Avila will begin working until midnight every day of the week. The decision, made by the Ministry of Agriculture, through Acopio, Cuba’s State Procurement and Distribution Agency for farm products, is based on the “experience” that two markets in the main municipality have been carrying out since March, and which – according to the authorities – allows the “working age population” to be able to buy food at that time.

The two markets in Ciego de Ávila that began working two months ago until midnight – El Cubanito, on Carretera Central, and Sabor Avileño, on Marcial Gomez Street – demonstrate, in the opinion of Yanisley Garlobo, Director of Development and Businesses of Acopio, there is an “improvement in the offer to the population, in the income of the workers and in the consolidation” of the entity.

Garlobo did not mention several obvious problems of this approach: blackouts, which make all commercial transactions difficult; the lack of products – which Acopio tries to mitigate with photographs of both markets, apparently stocked; the corruption of the food sector in the province, about which the official press frequently reports; and the increase in crime and danger in the streets, which means that most Cubans do not dare to transit as the night progresses.

Garlobo said there will be more markets “as long as Acopio has the financial and material resources to maintain them.”

The official said the night markets or “new type” markets work well because they are linked with private local agricultural businesses and give a “renewed image” of commerce. Garlobo said that more establishments in the province will soon join the night operation – three more in the city of Ciego de Avila, two in Moron and others “in the second half of the year” – but their opening will depend on financial support from those that already exist.

There will be more markets “as long as the financial and material resources are within Acopio’s reach to undertake the maintenance work and remodeling that the properties demand,” she added.

Less clear was the statement that market workers will also take on “collaboration in the furrows” when necessary, suggesting that employees will also have to work on the farms. The practice, warned the Acopio Purchasing specialist, “is part of the company’s way of doing things.” Indeed, the organization’s social networks show that the workers of these stores have come to “work together” with the farmers of different Ciego de Avila municipalities..

The Acopio Facebook page in Ciego de Avila has shown several photos showing how they work “successfully” until midnight. Pumpkins, pineapples, and papayas appeared on the tables at the El Cubanito market, but there were no signs of customers. The photos were also not taken at night. Acopio, whose motto promises food “available to everyone,” also does not refer to the prices of the food it sells.

The local newspaper Invasor, which published the announcement of the “reconversion” of the markets, does not offer good forecasts for food production in Ciego de Avila. Worse than being “stagnant,” the different crops are “regressing,” admitted the province’s Communist Party newspaper last Monday.

“There is a lack of effectiveness and consistency in the actions,” the authorities of the Provincial Agriculture Office argued when they noted not only the low production, but also the alarming level of crime in the fields of Ciego de Avila. “In many cases, the monitoring of food procurement is lost and, therefore, it does not reach the people at reasonable prices,” lamented the governor of the province.

The first secretary of the Communist Party in Ciego de Ávila, Julio Gomez, uttered a phrase in a meeting with the producers that went down in history: “Food exists,” he said – alluding to the fact that private sales points, not state ones, are stocked – the problem is that “from the furrow to the table” there is an entire process that seems destined to “further deteriorate the population’s pockets.”

His solution: “take stronger measures” with the farmers, “who violate marketing commitments to state destinations with open and continuous impunity.” “More drastic provisions such as the dismantling of electrical transformers for irrigation, and even withdrawing land from those who fail to comply or demonstrate their unjustified violation of land leasing terms known as usufruct. There is the case of some farmers whose land is prepared by state entities, or they are given fuel, and they still join the ranks of repeated offenders,” he alleged.

The slogan that summarized the meeting bordered on the utopian: “Arrive with more and cheaper food for the people.”

Translated by Translating Cuba.

Read more from Cuba here on Havana Times.

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