Asphyxiation in Havana
Girl with doll in Havana |
Like revolutionaries, a hurricane, the secret police, death when you least expect it, arbitrary and whimsical, La Fumigacion stalks Havana. Pouring out of upper floor windows, filling the streets and lungs of residents, the malodorous gray smoke from insecticide bombs is the tell-tale sign of the Cuban war against mosquitoes.
Several children died last December from Dengue Fever, a disease carried by mosquitoes. The government is staging an all-out attack against the insects. Kept under wraps to avoid loss of tourism, Cuba's number one industry before sugar and tobacco, there are more billboards proclaiming Lucha Contra Los Mosquitos than Viva la Revolucion!
Statistics abound on the dangers of Dengue, but there are none on the dangers of the insecticide or which precise chemicals are being used. How many people are hospitalized, sick, dead from respiratory reactions? Nobody knows, or tells.
View of Havana |
Sometimes they even cry, Oye, aténcion! Everyone out! right before unleashing the contents of their gas canisters. To the visitor and Habanero alike, there seems to be no plan, no schedule, no organization. One day it's your neighbor. The next it's across the street and down the block, and then it's your home under siege. (Fumigators might be bribed with an American dollar, if one is to be had, to please pass by this time.)
When walking down a residential street, you can tell which buildings have recently been gassed by the surreal gray smoke floating from doors and windows of ancient, crumbling edifices. Folks wait calmly across the street until they surmise it's safe to go back inside. It looks like the French film, The City of Lost Children - post-nuclear.
People might be subjected to fumigation at work, and then again when they get home the same day. One woman told me her office building was gassed from the bottom up. Employees had to descend the stairs through the evil fumes on their way out.
Crumbling buildings |
The official position is that the insecticide is harmless to everything but mosquitoes. Thus, people are calm about their own exposure, possible danger to their pets and houseplants, and potential contamination to food and water.
Told that by clearing out all of the debris and garbage from their property, the fight against Dengue will be helped, people complied, only to have the streets full of trash for days. Perhaps a lack of fuel for the trash trucks due to the embargo had something to do with that, or maybe it's just more government disorganization.
It was unseasonably cold and wet in Havana this winter. Many people are coughing and are feeling ill. Is it perhaps the air they are breathing?
2 comments:
Whats the relationship with dengue in Argentina? Is it better not to do anything than to be fumigated!?
Are you asking my opinion?
Because right now there is so much concern about Dengue fever in Argentina, I just posted about how another country handles the problem. Here in Buenos Aires we are told to get rid of standing water and use OFF! That's it.
Years ago in L.A. there was a spraying of Malathion from helicopters to kill the fruit fly larvae, which was pretty scary but at least we were warned: take animal food and water inside, cover your cars, etc.
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