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Cuba's Havana is piled high with garbage as US chokehold stops garbage trucks

Havana's garbage piles up on the streets, attracting hordes flies, and smelling of rotten foods. This is one of the visible effects of the U.S. effort to prevent oil reaching the Caribbean's largest island.

Cubadebate, a state-run news outlet, reported that only 44 out of 106 Havana's rubbish trucks could continue to operate due to fuel shortages. This slowed down garbage collection.

Residents sorted through the piles of cardboard boxes, plastic bottles, rags and used bags to find scraps that they could reuse, but motorists, pedestrians, and cyclists were forced to avoid the massive heaps.

Jose Ramon Cruz, a local resident, said: "It is all over the place." It's been over 10 days since the last garbage truck.

Residents in other towns of the island - which is home to 11 million people – took to social media to warn about the dangers to public health.

Cuban government implemented rationing to protect the essential services of a country already facing severe shortages in food, fuel and medicines.

In just two months, the country's oil supplies have dropped dramatically.

Venezuela, once Cuba's largest supplier, stopped shipping shipments around mid-December. Mexico's government said that it was also halting its shipments following Washington's threat to impose tariffs on countries who send supplies Cuba.

Last week, a Russian newspaper reported that Moscow is preparing to?send crude and fuel cargoes into the Communist-run Island in the near future? without giving a date.

Since the 1960s the United States has had an embargo against Cuba. But in recent months, the administration of Donald Trump has stepped up its stance by sanctioning vessels that ship oil to Cuba, and threatening tariffs for suppliers.

The government claims that the measures will force a "political shift in Cuba". The United Nations has voted in favor of the U.S. for a long time. Leaders from Mexico and Venezuela have said that blocking fuel would have serious humanitarian consequences. (Reporting and writing by Alien Fernandez, Mario Fuentes and Sarah Morland. Editing and reviewing by Dave Sherwood, Nick Zieminski and Nick Sherwood)

(source: Reuters)