KEY ADDRESS BY ARMY GENERAL
RAUL CASTRO RUZ, PRESIDENT OF THE COUNCIL OF STATES AND MINISTERS OF THE
OF THE NON-ALIGNED MOVEMENT.
Distinguished participants in this ministerial meeting:
It is an honor for our people and government to again
host a high level meeting of the Non-Aligned Movement. Two years and seven
months have passed since the celebration in this same hall of the 14th
Summit of Heads of State or Government in September 2006. On that occasion I
said:
“On the sound foundations of
our historic victories in the struggle for decolonization and the removal of
apartheid and with the rich experience of our efforts in favor of a New
International Economic Order and of peace, disarmament and the true exercise of
the right to development, the Non-Aligned Movement shall now wage heroic
battles against unilateralism, double standards and the impunity of the
powerful; for a more just and equitable international order to tackle neoliberalism,
plundering and pillage; for the survival of the human species instead of the
irrational consumerism of the wealthy nations.”
The challenges identified then are not only still
standing but they are now more dangerous and pressing. Therefore, the necessity
for
We are currently afflicted by a deep economic,
social, food, energy and environmental crisis that have become global. The
international debates are multiplied but they do not engage every country.
There is a growing awareness that solutions must be found shortly; however,
just and lasting solutions seem elusive.
If we fail to act firmly and expeditiously our
peoples stand to suffer again the worst consequences of this crisis, and for a
longer period of time.
It is impossible to sustain the unfair and irrational
consumption patterns that served as the basis to the current international
order imposed by a few that we have been forced to respect. A global order
inspired in hegemonic pretenses and the selfishness of privileged minorities is
neither legitimate nor ethically acceptable. A system that destroys the
environment and promotes unequal access to riches cannot last. Underdevelopment
is an unavoidable result of the current world order.
Neoliberalism has failed as an economic policy. Today,
any objective analysis raises serious questions about the myth of the goodness
of the market and its deregulation; the alleged benefits of privatizations and
the reduction of the states’ economic and redistribution capacity; and the
credibility of the financial institutions.
In 1979, thirty years ago, when Cuba first assumed
the chairmanship of the Non-Aligned Movement, the leader of the Cuban
Revolution comrade Fidel Castro alerted on the negative consequences of
spending over 300 billion dollars in weapons and on the existence of a foreign
debt of the underdeveloped countries that amounted to almost as much.
On that occasion comrade Fidel estimated that, at the
time, that figure would have allowed: “…to
build in one year 600 thousand schools to teach 400 million children; or 60
million comfortable houses for 300 million people; or 30 thousand hospitals
with 18 million beds; or 20 thousand factories providing jobs to over 20 million
workers; or placing 150 million hectares of land under irrigation which with an
adequate technical level could feed one billion people.”
Of course, nothing was done and the situation has
aggravated dramatically. Suffice it to say that currently the annual military
expenses exceed the figure of one trillion dollars; the number of unemployed in
the world could rise to 230 million during 2009; and in hardly a year –during
2008—the number of people starving in the world mounted from 854 million to 963
million.
The UN has estimated that 80 billion dollars a year
for a decade would be enough to eradicate poverty, hunger and the lack of
health and education services and houses all over the world. That figure is
three times lower than what the South countries spend every year to pay their
foreign debt.
The international system of economic relations
requires fundamental changes. This was demanded almost 35 years ago by the
member countries of our Movement in the Declaration and Plan of Action for the
Establishment of a New International Economic Order adopted in the 6th
Special Session of the United Nations General Assembly in May 1974.
The solution to the global economic crisis demands a
coordinated action with the universal, democratic and equitable participation
of all countries. The response cannot be a solution negotiated by the leaders
of the most powerful nations without the participation of the United Nations.
The G-20 solution calling for the strengthening of
the role and functions of the International Monetary Fund, whose nefarious policies
had a decisive effect on the emergence, aggravation and magnitude of the
current crisis cannot solve inequality, injustice or the unsustainability of
the present system.
The UN High Level Conference on the Economic and
Financial Crisis and its Impact on Development scheduled for
From its inception, this Movement has shown its
willingness to work for peace and security for the community of nations and for
defense of International Law. The removal of the weapons of mass destruction,
and foremost nuclear disarmament, is still a priority.
The practice of multilateralism requires absolute
respect for the sovereignty and territorial integrity of the states and for the
self-determination of the peoples. It also demands to dispense with threats and
the use of force in international relations, and to do without hegemonic
aspirations and imperial behavior. It requires to put an end to foreign
occupation and to deny impunity to such criminal aggressions as those of
The Movement should engage in every major debate of
the international agenda, in the different venues and multilateral forum and
with the broadest participation of its member countries, not to compete with
other groups of South countries but to strengthen and complement them.
We need to continue permanently improving the
Movement’s working methods. The fulfillment of the Plan of Action we have adopted
shall be an indispensable tool to determine our priorities and our tasks.
We should all start working right away to ensure a
successful 15th Summit of Heads of State or Government in
Finally, on behalf of
Although the measures recently announced by President
Obama are positive they are of limited scope. The blockade remains intact.
There is no political or moral pretext that justifies the continuation of that
policy.
And if they want to discuss everything, as we
recently said at an ALBA summit in
We have insisted that we are willing to discuss everything
with the
The greatest strength of our Movement lies in its
unity within our characteristic diversity. Such has been the major premise of
the Cuban presidency in the almost three years of its mandate.
I have no doubt that the Non-Aligned Movement will
continue to play a fundamental and constructive role in the international
debates.
I wish this Ministerial Meeting every success.
Thank you very much.