Minjus.gob.cu Solicitudes Site
Her heart sank. Then a PDF appeared in her "Notificaciones" folder. It was a letter, signed with a digital stamp: "Se requiere una inspección presencial de la propiedad. Presentarse en la Dirección Provincial de Justicia, Calle 23 y L, Vedado, el 15 de noviembre, 9:00 a.m."
They walked through a labyrinth of corridors to a small room with a single window overlooking a dusty courtyard. On the desk: Elena's expediente . It was thick as a brick.
Abuela Clara cried. Javier brought a bottle of Havana Club. But Elena didn't celebrate that night. She walked past her father's old house— her house now—and saw a light on in the window. A little girl was doing homework at the kitchen table, the same table her father had built. minjus.gob.cu solicitudes
Licenciada Fuentes pulled a single sheet from the file. It was a new form. Solicitud de Compensación Habitacional. "The new law allows two paths: eviction or co-solution. You can request a state apartment for the current occupants. It takes longer, but no one loses their home."
But last month, a new digital form had appeared on the Ministry of Justice portal: Solicitud para Reclamación de Propiedad (Request for Property Claim). No more waiting in line at 4 a.m. No more bribes for a stamped photocopy. Just a form. Her heart sank
But she noticed something. The tracker had a new feature: a chat icon. A tiny blue speech bubble in the corner. She clicked it.
The website minjus.gob.cu/solicitudes had a new entry under Elena's profile: Solicitud #0047823 – RESUELTA. She clicked. Presentarse en la Dirección Provincial de Justicia, Calle
"Follow me."
The tracker turned red. Retrasado por verificación de documentos adicionales.
Solicitud # 0047823.
For three years, Elena had been trying to reclaim her family’s vivienda —the small house in Centro Habana that her father had built brick by brick in the 1950s. After he passed, a bureaucratic fog descended. The state had registered the property under a "temporary occupancy" clause during a renovation project in the 90s. That "temporary" status had lasted twenty-five years.