Bus Terminals Overwhelmed By Hundreds Of Travelers Without Tickets / 
14ymedio, Marcelo Hernandez
14ymedio, Marcelo Hernandez, Havana, 27 December 2016 – Hundreds of 
people are crowded right now in the "last hour" bus terminals, or are on 
the waiting lists. With the regularly scheduled seats sold out, 
travelers sleep in the floors of these places and eat frugally, while 
dreaming of a vehicle that will get them home to spend New Year's with 
their families.
In mid-December, the newspaper Granma reported that the Voyager Company 
would put on sale new seats for interprovincial transport for the end 
the year. However, the tickets sold out in a couple of days and 
thousands of customers have been left stranded at "last hour" terminals 
throughout the country.
This time, unlike other years, the so-called "waiting list" was not 
addressed with a greater number of vehicles. The Business Group of 
Automotive Transport Services preferred to sell in advance the 
additional tickets to travel between 22 December 2016 and 7 January 2017.
The state transport company sold 9,000 seats above those offered by the 
regular National Bus Service, but only the most forward-thinking were 
able to get the tickets. The agencies that sell the tickets experienced 
days of huge crowds, and five days after the official announcement, 
tickets to Camaguey and Guantanamo were sold out.
Private transport companies provide only a little relief. Their high 
prices make it difficult for many travelers to use their services, 
because they can only afford the state rates.
"I know the face of almost everyone here, because most of these people 
have been here for many days," confides the employee who takes care of 
the men's toilet in the Villanueva last hour station in Havana. Chaos 
and discouragement reigns in the facilities, where the average stay is 
"four or five days" according to the worker.
"The police are coercing people to get them to leave," he explained to 
14ymedio freelance reporter Juannier Matos Rodriguez, who was waiting in 
Villanueva Monday to travel to Baracoa, Guantanamo. Entire families have 
placed cardboard on the floor to sleep and the uniformed police patrol 
the place.
"Several passengers have approached the employees asking for them to 
arrange extra buses so that all these families can travel, but they do 
not respond," says the young man. "The waiting list for Santiago de Cuba 
is not moving, it's been stuck on the same numbers for two days," he adds.
The most desperate, with the resources available, pay between 14 and 15 
Cuban Convertible Pesos (CUC) for a ride on a private truck bound for 
Santiago de Cuba, twice as much as the state bus. These are cargo 
vehicles re-configured for the transport of passengers. The best ones 
have cushy seats and even air conditioning, but in most cases they are 
uncomfortable and hot.
The National Bus Company serves 132 routes and in the first nine months 
of this year it moved 7.6 million people, but when holidays approach, 
the system collapses in the face of high demand. Most of the state-owned 
equipment is Yutong brand buses from China, with a decade of overuse and 
poor mechanical conditions.
The deterioration of the vehicles has combined this year with cuts in 
fuel consumption that affect the entire country. Passenger transport has 
been among the sectors most affected, although the government has also 
imposed restrictions on electricity consumption and a drastic reduction 
in the state sector's quota for gasoline or diesel.
Earlier this year, a discussion on the Roundtable TV program confirmed 
that interprovincial transportation only meets 70% of demand.
"Why doesn't 'Cuba Says' come here now?" a woman at the Villanueva last 
hour station complained Monday afternoon, in an allusion to the official 
television program critical of the bureaucracy and laziness. Several 
passengers recorded scenes with their mobile phones and from time to 
time a shout was heard over the general murmur: "A truck arrived for 
Holguín!"
After an announcement like this many throw themselves into the race, 
pushing and shoving to the point of small brawls, to board the vehicle. 
The police pull some people out of the melee and put them in their 
patrol cars. Everyone wants to get out of the hell the Villanueva 
station has become.
Source: Bus Terminals Overwhelmed By Hundreds Of Travelers Without 
Tickets / 14ymedio, Marcelo Hernandez – Translating Cuba - 
http://translatingcuba.com/bus-terminals-overwhelmed-by-hundreds-of-travelers-without-tickets-14ymedio-marcelo-hernandez/
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