09) THE LESSON OF HAITI
(The following
article is from the February 1-28, 2010 issue of People's Voice,
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Reflections by
Fidel Castro, January 14, 2010
Two days ago, at almost six o'clock
in the evening Cuban time and when, given its geographical location,
night had already fallen in Haiti, television stations began to
broadcast the news that a violent earthquake - measuring 7.3 on the
Richter scale - had severely struck Port-au-Prince. The seismic
phenomenon originated from a tectonic fault located in the sea just 15
kilometers from the Haitian capital, a city where 80% of the population
inhabit fragile homes built of adobe and mud.
The news
continued almost
without interruption for hours. There was no footage, but it was
confirmed that many public buildings, hospitals, schools and more
solidly-constructed facilities were reported collapsed. I have read
that an earthquake of the magnitude of 7.3 is equivalent to the energy
released by an explosion of 400,000 tons of TNT....
The tragedy
has genuinely moved
a significant number of people, particularly those in which that
quality is innate. But perhaps very few of them have stopped to
consider why Haiti is such a poor country. Why does almost 50% of its
population depend on family remittances sent from abroad? Why not
analyze the realities that led Haiti to its current situation and this
enormous suffering as well?
The most
curious aspect of this
story is that no one has said a single word to recall the fact that
Haiti was the first country in which 400,000 Africans, enslaved and
trafficked by Europeans, rose up against 30,000 white slave masters on
the sugar and coffee plantations, thus undertaking the first great
social revolution in our hemisphere. Pages of insurmountable glory were
written there. Napoleon's most eminent general was defeated there.
Haiti is the net product of colonialism and imperialism, of more than
one century of the employment of its human resources in the toughest
forms of work, of military interventions and the extraction of its
natural resources.
This
historic oversight would
not be so serious if it were not for the real fact that Haiti
constitutes the disgrace of our era, in a world where the exploitation
and pillage of the vast majority of the planet's inhabitants prevails.
Billions of
people in Latin
American, Africa and Asia are suffering similar shortages although
perhaps not to such a degree as in the case of Haiti.
Situations
like that of that
country should not exist in any part of the planet, where tens of
thousands of cities and towns abound in similar or worse conditions, by
virtue of an unjust international economic and political order imposed
on the world.
The world
population is not only
threatened by natural disasters such as that of Haiti, which is a just
a pallid shadow of what could take place in the planet as a result of
climate change, which really was the object of ridicule, derision, and
deception in Copenhagen.
It is only
just to say to all
the countries and institutions that have lost citizens or personnel
because of the natural disaster in Haiti: we do not doubt that in this
case, the greatest effort will be made to save human lives and
alleviate the pain of this long-suffering people. We cannot blame them
for the natural phenomenon that has taken place there, even if we do
not agree with the policy adopted with Haiti.
But I have
to express the opinion that it is now time to look for real and lasting
solutions for that sister nation.
In the field
of healthcare and
other areas, Cuba - despite being a poor and blockaded country - has
been cooperating with the Haitian people for many years. Around 400
doctors and healthcare experts are offering their services free of
charge to the Haitian people. Our doctors are working every day in 227
of the country's 337 communes. On the other hand, at least 400 young
Haitians have trained as doctors in our homeland. They will now work
with the reinforcement brigade which travelled there yesterday to save
lives in this critical situation. Thus, without any special effort
being made, up to 1,000 doctors and healthcare experts can be
mobilized, almost all of whom are already there willing to cooperate
with any other state that wishes to save the lives of the Haitian
people and rehabilitate the injured.
Another
significant number of young Haitians are currently studying medicine in
Cuba.
We are also
cooperating with the
Haitian people in other areas within our reach. However, there can be
no other form of cooperation worthy of being described as such than
fighting in the field of ideas and political action in order to put an
end to the limitless tragedy suffered by a large number of nations such
as Haiti.
The head of
our medical brigade
reported: "The situation is difficult, but we have already started
saving lives." He made that statement in a succinct message hours after
his arrival yesterday in Port-au-Prince with additional medical
reinforcements.
Later that night, he reported that
Cuban doctors and ELAM's Haitian graduates were being deployed
throughout the country. They had already seen more than 1,000 patients
in Port-au-Prince, immediately establishing and putting into operation
a hospital that had not collapsed and using field hospitals where
necessary. They were preparing to swiftly set up other centers for
emergency care.
We feel a wholesome pride for the
cooperation that, in these tragic instances, Cuba doctors and young
Haitian doctors who trained in Cuba are offering our brothers and
sisters in Haiti!