This story
was taken from Bulatlat, the Philippines's alternative weekly
newsmagazine (www.bulatlat.com, www.bulatlat.net, www.bulatlat.org).
Vol. V, No. 50, January 29-February 4, 2006
STREETWISE
Modern-day David and
Goliath It
is incumbent on all honest and fair men and women who can appreciate the heroic
efforts of the Cuban people and its leaders to stand up to U.S. punishment,
bullying and outright aggression to stand in solidarity with them.
By Carolina Pagaduan-Araullo
The facts and figures were by themselves quite
impressive and made it easier for participants to the 3rd Asia Pacific Regional
Conference on Solidarity with Cuba to transcend political and
ideological differences and unite behind the call to end the 46-year United
States embargo against the small, socialist island state.
I was fortunate enough to be one of 194
delegates from over a hundred organizations from 17 countries meeting in
Chennai, India over the weekend to hear about Cuba's astounding achievements.
According to Mr. Sergio Corrieri-Hernandez ,
president of the Cuban Institute of Friendship with the Peoples, economic growth
was 11.8% in 2005 compared with an average for Latin America of barely 4%.
Over half of industrial sectors experienced
significant growth: nickel exports benefited from buoyant international prices
while tourism was up by 12%. In the pharmaceuticals sector, production of
medicines rose by over 26%.
We were appraised by the Sri Lankan Minister for
Science and technology that Cuba had successfully developed a vaccine against
dengue hemorrhagic fever and had been free of outbreaks for the last two years.
Cuba's remarkable advances in biotechnology had also resulted in vaccines for
head and neck cancer for which foreign, including U.S. multinational drug
companies, were negotiating production agreements.
Wage rates and retirement pensions were
increased substantially, a fact that would be the envy of workers and ordinary
employees in the Philippines.
Hundreds of schools and health centers have been
renovated with over 140 social programs in public health education, culture and
welfare successfully implemented. For example, 21 district intensive-therapy
units, equipped to modern standards, were completed; restructuring and
extension works were carried out at 52 national hospitals, equipped with the
world's best technology.
If Cuban doctors and other health professionals
are going abroad in the thousands, it is not to seek greener pastures and more
professionally rewarding working conditions like their Filipino counterparts. To
date 27,000 are selflessly serving in 60 countries across the world,
particularly in Latin America and Africa. 2,345 of them are in Pakistan,
working in difficult and hazardous situations in far-flung areas, to respond to
the humanitarian crisis recently wrought by a devastating earthquake.
At the same time, dozens of thousands of
international students are being trained in Cuba, of whom 12,000 are studying
medicine.
The process of making higher education
universally accessible has benefited 500,000 students. Thus Cuba is becoming
what some observers call a "university nation" where higher education for all is
no longer mere rhetoric but a concrete reality.
These solid achievements are all the more
astounding considering what Cuba has been up against since the collapse of the
Soviet Union in the early 90s. It involved the loss of 85% of Cuba's markets
for its main exports like sugar, 80% of imports and a 35 percentage-point
nosedive in its GNP.
Mr. Hernandez matter-of-factly pointed out that
not many governments could not have withstood such a blow. Argentina, for
example, lost only 12% GNP in its own crisis and subsequently had three
presidents in just two years.
But since the victory of the Cuban Revolution
against the Batista dictatorship in January 1959, the U.S. and its allies have
not stopped attempts to destroy and overthrow the first socialist state in the
western part of the hemisphere.
An economic, commercial and financial embargo
has been imposed on Cuba by the U.S., which is still in place after 46 years,
making it one of the most enduring embargoes in modern history. It is estimated
that the embargo has so far caused Cuba the direct economic impact of U.S. $82
billion with ongoing annual loss of around $2 billion.
The economic blockade that has been legally
reinforced in the last decade with other laws that ban Cuba from importing goods
of U.S. origin from third countries, impose penalties on foreign companies doing
business in Cuba, permit U.S. citizens to sue foreign investors who make use of
American-owned property seized by the Cuban government, and deny entry into the
U.S. to such foreign investors.
Now the question begs to be answered. What can
justify such a cruel and shameful embargo that is undermining the fundamental
right of a sovereign nation to chart its own destiny? What gives the U.S. the
legal and moral right to deny the Cuban people their choice of the kind of
social system – socialism – that will sustain and develop their collective goals
and the kind of government – led by the revolutionary leader Fidel Castro – that
will steer the people in their chosen direction?
Furthermore, how can such an embargo stay when,
in the past 13 years, more and more countries have been voting in the United
Nations General Assembly for the U.S. to lift its irrational and unjustifiable
sanctions? In the 2004 vote, there were 179 in favor of the resolution, only 4
against and 1 abstaining.
Clearly, the U.S. embargo against Cuba is
violating fundamental principles of international relations and directly
subverts the sovereignty and independence of Cuba. The destructive hostility of
ten U.S. administrations during the last 46 years has proven itself in every
means that the U.S. has utilized to destroy the Cuban revolution, from armed
invasion and state-sponsored terrorism, to assassination attempts against Mr.
Castro and up to the introduction of plant and animal plagues that will affect
civilian populations.
But according to the Cubans, no administration
has been as hostile as that of George W. Bush. On May 2004, Mr. Bush approved
a 450 page report issued by the "Commission for Assistance to a Free Cuba" which
included measures to tighten the blockade, destroy Cuba's tourism industry,
prohibit foreign investment, restrict Cubans in the U.S. from sending money to
their families, etc.
The Cubans have no illusions. They see such a
report as a "document of colonization" underscoring heightened U.S. interference
meant to force Cuba to undertake "regime change". They know that Cuba is in the
crosshairs of the U.S. so-called "war on terror" along with Syria, Korea and
Iran because they have been demonized as "rogue states". In fact Cuba appears
on all the blacklists that the Bush administration has seen fit to draw up:
human rights, terrorism, drugs etc.
It is incumbent on all honest and fair men and
women who can appreciate the heroic efforts of the Cuban people and its leaders
to stand up to U.S. punishment, bullying and outright aggression to stand in
solidarity with them. Only in this way can the
Davids of today prevail over the monster Goliath that also goes by the name U.S.
imperialism. BusinessWorld/Posted by Bulatlat © 2006 Bulatlat
■
Alipato Publications Permission is granted to reprint or redistribute this article, provided its author/s and Bulatlat are properly credited and notified.
BusinessWorld
Posted by Bulatlat