HAVANA — Cubans are hustling to become more self-sufficient as the U.S. government tightens its economic noose over the communist-run island in a move experts say is meant to force a popular uprising and usher in a new government.
A sharp increase in U.S. sanctions was already suffocating Cubans when critical oil shipments from Venezuela were disrupted after the U.S. attacked the South American country and arrested its leader.
The long-term repercussions of those halted shipments have yet to hit Cuba, but its people are not waiting.
Some are installing solar panels while others are growing their own crops or returning to a simpler way of life, one that doesn't rely on technology or petroleum.
''It's how you survive,'' said Jose Ángel Méndez Faviel. ''It's best to depend on yourself.''
Méndez recently moved from the center of Havana to a farm in the rural community of Bacuranao because of Cuba's severe blackouts. At the farm, he can cook with firewood and charcoal, something unthinkable in a darkened city apartment.
Méndez said he doesn't know what to make of U.S. President Donald Trump's threats against Cuba, but he's not taking any chances. He's stocking up on gasoline, charcoal and produce, which he began planting three months ago at his farm.
Méndez also is thinking of buying back his old horse that he sold in favor of motorized equipment to transport vegetables he sells at local markets.