REFLECTIONS
BY COMRADE FIDEL
RAFAEL CORREA
I
remember when he visited us, months before the electoral campaign when he was
thinking of running as a candidate for the Presidency of Ecuador. He had been the Minister of the Economy in
the government of Alfredo Palacio, a surgeon with
professional prestige who had also visited us as Vice President, before
becoming the President in an unexpected situation that took place in
A
while earlier Correa had resigned from the Ministry of the Economy. He was unhappy with what he called
administrative corruption instigated by Oxy, a foreign company that explored
and invested important sums of money, but was holding on to four out of every
five barrels of oil that it extracted.
He didn’t talk about nationalization, but about taxing them heavily;
these taxes would be assigned in advance to specific social investments. He had
already approved the measures and a judge had declared them to be valid.
Since
the word “nationalize” had not been mentioned, I thought he felt apprehensive
about the concept. It didn’t surprise me
because he had graduated as an economist with much acclaim from a well-known
There
are high-risk investments that use sophisticated technology and that no small
nation like
Since
this was already in 2006 and we were determined to promote the energy
revolution, --ours was the first country on the planet to proclaim this as a
vital issue for humankind-- I had dealt with the subject particularly emphatically.
But I halted, as I understood one of his reasons.
I
related to him the conversation I had had a while ago with the president of
REPSOL, a Spanish company. This company, associated with other international
companies, would undertake an expensive operation to drill the ocean floor,
more than 2000 meters down, using sophisticated technology, in
Correa,
for his part, had told me that for every one hundred dollars taken out by the
companies, only twenty remained in the country; it didn’t even get into the
budget, he said; it was left in a separate fund for just about anything other
than improving the living conditions of the people.
I
abolished the fund, he told me, and directed 40 percent towards education and
health, technological and highway development, and the rest towards buying back
the debt if the price was favorable, and if not, investing it in something more
useful. Before, every year we had to buy
a portion of that debt which was becoming more expensive.
In
the case of
I
encourage him to go on and he calmly explains.
The foreign company Oxy is one that has broken its contract and
according to Ecuadorian law it requires an expiration date. It means that the oil field operated by this
company must go over to the State, but because of Yankee pressure the
government does not dare to occupy it; a situation is created which is not
contemplated by the legislation. The law
just states that an expiration date must be set, and nothing more. The judge at the court of first instance at that
moment was the president of PETROECUADOR and he made it happen. I was a member of PETROECUADOR and they
called an emergency meeting to expel him from his position. I didn’t attend and they couldn’t fire
him. The judge declared the expiration
date.
What
did the Yankees want? I asked him. They
wanted a fine, he quickly replied.
Listening to him I realized that I had underestimated him.
I
was in a hurry because of a great number of commitments. I invited him to sit
in on a meeting with a large group of highly qualified Cuban professionals who
were leaving for
Dinner
with the Ecuadorian economist took place into the morning hours of February 9,
2006. There were scarcely any view
points that I didn’t cover. I even spoke
to him about the very harmful mercury that modern industry scatters throughout
the planet’s oceans. Consumerism was of
course a subject that I emphasized; the high cost of the kilowatt/hour in the
thermoelectric plants; the differences between socialist and communist forms of
distribution, the role of money, the trillions spent on advertising which
people had no choice but to pay for in the prices of goods, and the studies
made by university social brigades who discovered, among the 500 thousand families
in the capital, the number of elderly folk lived alone. I explained the stage
of university courses for all that we were involved in.
We
became friends even though he perhaps received the impression that I was
self-sufficient. If that happened, it was truly not my intention.
Since
that time I have observed his every step: the electoral process, focusing on
the concrete problems of Ecuadorians and the people’s victory over the
oligarchy.
In
the history of our peoples there are many things that bring us together.
Imperialism
has just committed a monstrous crime in
Absolutely
no one has the right to kill in cold blood.
If we accept that imperial method of warfare and barbarism, Yankee bombs
directed by satellites could fall on any group of Latin American men and women,
in the territory of any country, war or no war.
The fact that this happened on undisputed Ecuadorian territory is an
aggravating circumstance.
We
are not an enemy of
Today,
with everything at risk, we have not been transformed into belligerent
people. We are determined supporters of
that unity among peoples which Marti named Our America.
If
we keep quiet we shall become accomplices.
Today they would like to have our friend, the economist and President of
Correa
has in his hands the few survivors and the rest of the bodies. The two which are missing prove that
Ecuadorian territory was occupied by troops that crossed the border. Now he can cry out like Emile Zola: J’accuse!
Fidel
Castro Ruz
March
3, 2008.
8:36
p.m.