Reflections
by Comrade Fidel
THE PRIME STIMULUS FOR OUR EFFORTS
The graphic reporting by journalist Gladys Rubio on the cholera epidemic
in Haiti
that was published on yesterday’s Round Table TV programme was so impressive
that I decided to postpone the Reflection I announced on Monday until today,
Wednesday. The aim of the report was to
analyze, from a different angle, the dramatic impact on the Haitian people of
the January 12th earthquake this year, followed in less than 10
months by the generalized cholera epidemic and a hurricane.
Those events were taking place in a country that had been the victim of
conquistadors, colonialism and slavery.
Its native population had been wiped out by the conquest and the
enforced hunt for gold.
The roots of the nation of Haiti
are the hundreds of thousands of human beings wrenched from Africa
by the European slave traders and sold to the Haitian slave-owning plantation
owners to produce coffee, sugar and other tropical goods with which could
supply the emerging capitalist markets.
The Haitian people were the protagonists, during the early years of the
nineteenth century, of the first social revolution in this hemisphere; it was
the source of inspiration and support in terms of weapons for those who carried
out the heroism of liberating South America
from Spanish domination.
Our solidarity with the people of Haiti has a two-fold root: it is
born from our ideas, but also from our history.
After the social revolution that occurred there, Spanish colonialism
turned Cuba, where countless
Africans had also been torn from Africa and
sold as slaves, into the main supplier of coffee, sugar and other products from
the tropics.
As a result of that process, when the Spanish colonies in South and
Central America won their independence in bloody and heroic battle, the Cuban
colony was contributing more net income to the Spanish metropolis than all
those countries together before they had declared their independence, a fact
that decisively influenced the fate of our Homeland throughout the almost two
centuries that were to follow.
Two days ago I was explaining how our medical cooperation with Haiti began,
leading us to train hundreds of young doctors from that sister country and to
send a legion of Cuban health professionals.
It isn’t something I would be mentioning just by chance.
Nor are we surprised by the American and European disinformation efforts
that cover up and lie about the motives for Cuba’s behaviour.
Three days ago, a well-known British newspaper, The Independent, with unchallengeable prestige among the liberal
media in Great Britain – even though it does not enjoy the privilege WikiLeaks
granted The Guardian and four other
well-known press agencies who consulted with Washington on the most sensitive
points of information received – published a daring article by journalist Nina
Lakhani, under the caption of “Cuban medics in Haiti put the world to shame”. This
is the matter that I wanted to analyze, because of its daring to call a spade a
spade on this subject, even though it doesn’t mean that it shares each of the
evaluations about the motives determining our behaviour. I shall explain by using the translation of
that text, as briefly as possible.
“They
are the real heroes ―she says― of the Haitian earthquake disaster,
the human catastrophe on America’s
doorstep which Barack Obama pledged a monumental US humanitarian mission to
alleviate. Except these heroes are from America’s
arch-enemy Cuba,
whose doctors and nurses have put US efforts to shame.
“A medical brigade of 1,200 Cubans is
operating all over earthquake-torn and cholera-infected Haiti, as part
of Fidel Castro’s international medical mission which has won the socialist
state many friends, but little international recognition.”
“… international aid agencies were alone
in tackling the devastation that killed 250,000 people and left nearly 1.5
million homeless. […] Cuban healthcare workers have been in Haiti since 1998 […]And amid the fanfare and
publicity surrounding the arrival of help from the US
and the UK,
hundreds more Cuban doctors, nurses and therapists arrived with barely a
mention.”
“Figures released last week show that
Cuban medical personnel, working in 40 centres across Haiti, have
treated more than 30,000 cholera patients since October. They are the largest
foreign contingent, treating around 40 per cent of all cholera patients.
Another batch of medics from the Cuban Henry Reeve Brigade, a disaster and
emergency specialist team, arrived recently as it became clear that Haiti
was struggling to cope with the epidemic that has already killed hundreds.”
“…Cuba has trained
550 Haitian doctors for free at the Escuela Latinoamericana de Medicina en Cuba (Elam), one of the country’s most
radical medical ventures. Another 400 are currently being trained at the
school, which offers free education – including free books and a little spending
money – to anyone sufficiently qualified who cannot afford to study medicine in
their own country.
“John Kirk is a professor of Latin
American studies at Dalhousie University in Canada
who researches Cuba’s
international medical teams. He said: “Cuba’s
contribution in Haiti
is like the world’s greatest secret. They are barely mentioned, even though
they are doing much of the heavy lifting.”
“This tradition can be traced back to
1960, when Cuba sent a
handful of doctors to Chile,
hit by a powerful earthquake, followed by a team of 50 to Algeria in
1963. This was four years after the revolution, which saw nearly half the
country’s 7,000 doctors voting with their feet and leaving for the US.”
“…The best-known programme is Operation
Miracle, which began with ophthalmologists treating cataract sufferers
in impoverished Venezuelan villages in exchange for oil. This initiative has
restored the eyesight of 1.8 million people in 35 countries, including that of
Mario Teran, the Bolivian sergeant who killed Che Guevara in 1967.”
“The Henry Reeve Brigade, rebuffed by the
Americans after Hurricane Katrina, was the first team to arrive in Pakistan after
the 2005 earthquake, and the last to leave six months later.”
“…according to Professor Kirk. ….'It is also an obsession of Fidel’s and it
wins him votes in the UN'.
“A third of Cuba’s
75,000 doctors, along with 10,000 other health workers, are currently working
in 77 poor countries, including El Salvador,
Mali and East
Timor. This still leaves one doctor for every 220 people at home,
one of the highest ratios in the world, […] one for every 370 in England.
“Wherever they are invited, Cubans
implement their prevention-focused holistic model, visiting families at home,
proactively monitoring maternal and child health. This has produced “stunning
results” in parts of El Salvador, Honduras and Guatemala, lowering infant and
maternal mortality rates, reducing infectious diseases and leaving behind
better trained local health workers, according to Professor Kirk’s research.”
“Medical training in Cuba lasts six years – a year longer than in the
UK
– […] every graduate works as a family
doctor for three years minimum.”
“This model has helped Cuba to achieve some of the world’s most
enviable health improvements, despite spending only $400 per person last year
compared with $3,000 in the UK
and $7,500 in the US,
according to Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development figures.”
“Infant mortality rates, one of the most
reliable measures of a nation’s healthcare, are 4.8 per 1,000 live births –
comparable with Britain and
lower than the US.
Only 5 per cent of babies are born with a low birth weight, a crucial factor in
long-term health…"
“Imti Choonara, a paediatrician from Derby, leads a delegation … at annual workshops in Cuba’s third city, Camaguey. “Healthcare in Cuba is phenomenal, and the key is the family
doctor, […] and whose focus is on prevention … The irony is that Cubans came to
the UK
after the revolution to see how the NHS worked. They took back what they saw,
refined it and developed it further; meanwhile we are moving towards the US
model”, Professor Choonara said.”
American embargo […] prevents many US companies from trading with Cuba, and
persuades other countries to follow suit. The 2009/10 report includes drugs for
childhood cancers, HIV and arthritis, some anaesthetics, as well as chemicals
needed to diagnose infections and store organs.”
“…Cubans are immensely proud and
supportive of their contribution in Haiti and other poor countries,
delighted to be punching above their weight on the international scene...”
“Medical training is another example. There
are currently 8,281 students from more than 30 countries enrolled at Elam, which
last month celebrated its 11th anniversary. The government hopes to inculcate a
sense of social responsibly into the students in the hope that they will work
within their own poor communities for at least five years.”
“Damien Joel Suarez, 27, a second year from New Jersey, is one of
171 American students; 47 have already graduated. He dismisses allegations that
Elam
is part of the Cuban propaganda machine. “´Of course, Che is a hero here but he
isn’t forced down your neck`.”
Not
all the statements about Cuba
are favourable. The article also has criticisms, several of which we share, and
at times we are even more severe than The
Independent. The article talks about low salaries and shortages. Besides
our errors, it does not mention that over the course of more than 50 years of
blockade, aggressions and threats, our country has been forced to invest
enormous energy, time and resources in order to resist the blows of the most powerful
empire that has ever existed in history.
Nevertheless, it is admirable to see
the sincerity and clarity with which Nina Lakhani writes, and with which The Independent publishes, in that brave
article about the significance for the long-suffering people of Haiti of a
tragedy which, in its first stage cost the lives of almost 3,000 victims, among
them children, young people and adults, many of whom suffer from malnutrition
and other health ravages, sometimes without even having firewood to boil their
drinking water.
News coming in from that sister country informs us that until today,
Wednesday the 29th, another 717 people have been cared for by the Cuban Medical
Mission. There are no reported deaths in
five consecutive days. The death rate
among those looked after by Cuba
which reaches 48,931 by now, has been reduced to 0.55%. The official figure of
citizens affected by the disease was up to
130,534, and the death toll was at 2,761 for a rate of 2.1%. We are struggling
to apply more efficient methods at all the centres fighting the epidemic. The Penetration
Groups of the Henry Reeve Brigade –Cubans, Latin Americans and Haitians, all ELAM graduates – number 42 at the present time,
and they can penetrate into any of the most isolated sub-communes in Haiti. They also have 61 cholera care centres.
Our country’s effort in favour of human health which started with the
triumph of the Revolution itself, as The
Independent’s article publishes, can be seen in the fact that next year
8,000 doctors will graduate in the Bolivarian
Republic of Venezuela who were trained in both
theory and practice by Cuban health specialists. Venezuela will also reach levels of
healthcare that will place it among the first countries in the world. Such heartening results are the prime
stimulus for our efforts.
Fidel Castro Ruz
December 29, 2010
8:07 p.m.