Back to all interviews
Freedom Collection

Interviews with Alejandrina García de la Riva

Interviewed November 22, 2024

We started getting cell phones when it was allowed in Cuba [after a ban on personal cell phones was lifted in 2008]. We can call each other to say what is happening to us; if we are being arrested. We would share messages. We get calls from around the world. We are interviewed. Cell phones are good.

Having a cell phone in Cuba is very expensive. Calls are rather expensive. One minute costs 45 Cuban Pesos and international calls are more than one dollar, almost a dollar. It is very expensive. The [text] messages have dropped slightly but each costs 9 cents. It used to cost 16 Cuban Pesos. It is very expensive.

You have to maintain the line. Every two months you must pay to keep the phone line active.

There is almost no Internet access [in Cuba]. It is expensive. An hour of Internet costs about one CUC, the convertible Cuban currency.

[The Cuban convertible peso (CUC) is one of Cuba’s two official currencies; the other, which is more widely used by average citizens, is the Cuban peso (CUP). The CUC is pegged to the U.S. dollar and worth 25 times as much as the CUP.]

There are embassies that have given us the opportunity, like the United States Interests Section, as well as the Swiss and Czech Embassies. We have been allowed to go twice a month, take turns and have an hour, an hour and a half to call.

The newest thing is Twitter (not sure if I’m pronouncing it correctly) that has been very good for sharing the Ladies’ [Ladies in White] information.