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Excellencies,
Emigration is a right that must be respected. It
is unfair and cruel to be forced to emigrate and
leave homeland and family behind in order to
provide food, healthcare and education to your
children.
Sending remittances to family back home is a
noble act which should be facilitated but it is
humiliating for a country to have to depend on
this money.
The fact that rich countries are adopting ever
more restrictive, abusive and xenophobic
measures on emigration is morally unacceptable.
The wall on the Mexican border and the immigrant
hunts that take place there are proof, if any
were needed, of the contempt that the powerful
feel towards all those who are not as powerful,
even if these governments are their allies.
Alongside this form of emigration is another
which is just as shocking. Doctors, computer
programmers, teachers, nurses and other
professionals and technicians are encouraged to
migrate to rich countries, and are offered wages
and conditions unavailable to them in our
countries. For them there are no walls or forced
returns, on the contrary, there are plans and
programs in place to lure them. Around 240,000
Latin American university graduates migrated
last year. Training these professionals cost no
less than 5 billion dollars. We should be paid
compensation and I propose that we make this
demand.
These émigrés, whose rights we justly defend,
are a consequence of the plundering,
exploitation and unequal distribution of wealth.
Nothing will stop this migration as long as
there is underdevelopment and poverty, as long
as the current neoliberal economic policies are
imposed on the countries of the South, and as
long as the current international economic order
remains unchanged.
I want to make something perfectly clear. In
most underdeveloped countries there is no
political will or economic or human interest to
change this situation. The opulent and
spendthrift North uses immigrants while
discriminating against them. The South is
providing raw material to the North, while
serving as a kind of warehouse from where they
get all their resources, from mineral supplies
to human talent.
Just one example that confirms this: the
Millennium aims and goals, which represent
nothing more than a modest palliative for the
problems currently endured by underdeveloped
countries, will not be fulfilled. The developed
world did not have any intention of providing
the minimum financial aid asked of them and
billions of people continue to live without
access to food, healthcare or education.
Spending on arms and wars now exceeds one
trillion dollars; another trillion is spent on
commercial publicity, which in the case of
medication, for example, means that the price is
multiplied by up to ten times; the debt still
hasn’t been cancelled and the official
development assistance is subject to an
increasing number of conditions: advisers coming
from the North must live in luxury, purchases
must be made in donor countries, and less and
less cooperation is given to healthcare and
education while more and more is given to the
struggle against drug trafficking and for good
governance and human rights advice.
Instead of trying to change the current
situation, the United States issues certificates
on “good conduct regarding migration”. Good
conduct means letting the professionals migrate,
restricting the emigration of non-professionals
and accepting back those undesirable to them,
after these have taken a postgraduate course in
lawbreaking on the streets and in the jails of
the United States.
The United States, which depended and still
depends so much on immigrants for their economic
development, and the European Union, which has
been a great source of emigrants in its time,
are now the greatest persecutors of immigrants
in the world, and apply the most restrictive
policies.
The free exchange of commodities that the
developed world wants to impose and the free
flow of capital that it demands are nothing but
a snare if they are not accompanied by the free
passage of people.
In this regard, and in others, the hypocrisy
and double standards of the world in which we
live are laid bare.
The issue of migration in Cuba deserves a
special mention.
A Latin American who goes to live in the United
States is an immigrant but if Cuban this person
is labeled a political exile fleeing the
communist regime.
A Latin American must wait in his or her
country for a permit to migrate to the United
States. If this person is an illegal immigrant,
they are returned, but if this person is Cuban,
once in the United States, they are immediately
granted residency and work, and after one year
they automatically receive permanent residency,
in compliance with the Cuban Adjustment Act.
The Bush administration cancelled migration
talks, once again limited remittances to a total
of $300 every three months and imposed travel
restrictions that allow Cuban immigrants to
travel to Cuba only once every three years and
that to visit only parents, grandparents,
children, grandchildren or siblings; that is, to
Mr. Bush, a cousin or aunt is not a family
member.
The United States government offers shelter and
impunity in their country to terrorists who have
committed murder and hijacked boats and planes
in order to migrate; it restricts legal
emigration while encouraging illegal emigration
in order to use this as propaganda against Cuba,
heedless of the fact that countless people have
lost their lives in the Florida Straits.
This policy, enforced for decades, seeks to
eventually promote a massive exodus which can be
used to intensify the anti-Cuban campaign and,
ultimately, serve as a pretext for military
aggression.
A program financed by the United States
government is aimed at luring Cuban doctors and
other healthcare specialists who are rendering
important services in various countries, but
they are coming up against the iron will of the
new generation of professionals trained by the
Revolution and our solidarity programs will not
be stopped.
In hardly two years, Operation Miracle has
helped over 450 thousand people from Latin
America and the Caribbean to recuperate their
vision, and all these services have been
provided free of charge. By now, conditions have
been created to operate on one million people
every year.
Even though our country’s own resources would
not suffice to provide these services, if
imperialism succeeded in its offensive against
Cuba’s economic resources, the capacity would be
removed to perform eye surgery on one million
Latin American and Caribbean people during 2007.
Such figure does not include operated Cubans
whose number this year is almost 100 thousand.
The new concepts applied to the massive and
urgent training of physicians, from Latin
America and elsewhere in the world, will make it
possible to have, in a rather short time, over
10 thousand new doctors annually, who will not
practice private medicine but will take
healthcare to and preserve the lives of millions
of people.
Today, cooperation in the field of health
enables Cuba, and increasingly Bolivia and
Venezuela, to ensure all of its citizens,
without exemption, medical care of excellence
provided free of charge.
At this moment, 2,400,000 Latin Americans from
11 countries are no longer illiterates and
thousands of Cuban specialists work as sport
instructors.
Although blockaded and harassed, Cuba has never
surrendered, and the countries of Latin America
can always count on Cuba to fight for their
rights which, as we know, will not be handed to
us on a plate.
Thank you very much. |