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Reflections of Fidel
The double betrayal of Philips
(Taken from CubaDebate)
THE United States owns the most patents in the
world. It has stolen scientists from every country,
developed or developing, who are undertaking
research in a myriad of spheres, from the production
of weapons of mass destruction to medicines and
medical equipment. For that reason, the economic and
technological blockade is not something that merely
serves as a pretext for blaming the empire for our
own difficulties.
Public healthcare is one of the most advanced
fields in our country, despite the fact that the
United States stole close to 50% of the doctors who
had graduated from the only university in Cuba, a
figure in excess of 5,000, many of whom lacked
employment.
In that area, one of the most beautiful pages of
international cooperation on the part of the Cuban
Revolution was written, initiated thanks to a group
of doctors who were sent to the recently-independent
Algeria almost half a century ago. That policy has
not ended, and in that highly humane field our
country enjoys universal recognition.
No one supposes that it has been an easy task.
The United States has done everything possible to
prevent it from happening. During the time that has
passed, it has made maximum efforts to sabotage it.
It applied against Cuba all possible variants of its
criminal economic blockade which, later on, in
virtue of the Helms-Burton Act, acquired an
extraterritorial nature during the administration of
Bill Clinton.
When the socialist bloc collapsed and, months
later, its principal bastion the Soviet Union
disintegrated, Cuba decided to keep on fighting. By
then, our people had acquired a high level of
awareness and political culture.
In 1992, Hugo Chávez led a military uprising
against the bourgeois oligarchic government of the
Punto Fijo pact that had pillaged Bolívar’s homeland
for more than three decades. He suffered
imprisonment, just as we did. He visited Cuba in
1994 and years later, with the full support of his
people, he assumed the presidency and initiated the
Bolivarian Revolution.
The Venezuelan people, like that of Cuba, soon
had to confront the hostility of the United States,
which planned the fascist coup d’état in 2002 that
was defeated by the people and revolutionary
military personnel. Months later, came the oil coup,
creating the most difficult moment and one in which,
once again, the leader, the people and the
Venezuelan military were outstanding. Chávez and
Venezuela offered us total solidarity in the midst
of the Special Period and we have given them ours.
At that time, our country had no less than 60,000
specialized doctors, more than 150,000 experienced
teachers and a people who had written brilliant
internationalist pages. After the oil coup, the
river of our cooperative workers in education and
healthcare programs began to flow, and they
cooperated with the Bolivarian Revolution in one of
the most profound and rapid social programs
undertaken in any Third World country.
I cite these precedents because they are
indispensable when it come to judging the treachery
of imperialism and comprehending the issue that I am
tackling today: the abandonment and betrayal of Cuba
and Venezuela by what was a well-known and
relatively prestigious European multinational: the
Dutch transnational Philips, which specializes in
the manufacture of medical equipment.
I wrote a Reflection on this subject two years
ago – July 14, 2007 – but I did not want to mention
that company by name. I still held out the hope that
the situation would be rectified.
We had cooperated with the Venezuelan people in
order to create one of the best healthcare systems
in the world. Tens of thousands of specialized
doctors and other Cuban healthcare professional had
lent their services there. President During one of
his visits to Cuba, Hugo Chávez, satisfied with the
work of the first contingents who traveled to
Venezuela to work within Barrio Adentro – the
program aimed at providing healthcare services in
the country’s poorest urban and rural areas – asked
us to create a program that could benefit every
sector of Venezuelan society, working class, middle
class or the rich. This led to the emergence of the
Advanced Technology Diagnosis Centers; these would
complement the task of the 600 Comprehensive
Diagnosis Centers which, like polyclinics with a
wide range of services, with their laboratories and
equipment, would support the Barrio Adentro doctors’
offices. A significant number of rehabilitation
centers would assume the humane task of attending to
any patient with physical or learning disabilities.
In virtue of this request from the president, we
acquired the relevant equipment for 27 Advanced
Technology Diagnosis Centers distributed throughout
the 24 states of Venezuela, three of which possess
two each because of the size of their populations.
It is standard practice for us to always purchase
medical equipment from the most prestigious and
advanced companies at world level. We even try to
ensure the participation of at least two of the most
specialized companies in the supply of the most
complex equipment.
In this way, the most sophisticated and costly
medical imaging equipment, such as multi-slice
computed tomography (CT), nuclear magnetic resonance,
diagnostic ultrasound and other similar machines
were purchased from the German firm Siemens and the
Dutch company Philips. Neither of the two produces
all of the equipment but they do manufacture some of
the most complex and sophisticated equipment. Both
are in competition with each other in terms of
quality and price. We acquired diagnostic equipment
from the two companies for Venezuela and for Cuba,
where we were developing a similar plan for medical
services that had received very few resources in the
most difficult years of the Special Period.
For more than 10 different specialties, we
acquired equipment from the two companies for
services in the two countries. I will not mention
those of the German firm Siemens, which met its
commitments. I will confine myself to Philips; this
company supplied equipment for 12 specialties
sharing the provision of the most important and
costly items with the other company: 15 40-slice CT
machines, 28 0.23 Tesla Nuclear Magnetic Resonance
machines, eight tele-command stations for
Urology, 37 3D
diagnostic ultrasound machines, two neurological
angiograms, two cardiology angiograms, two
polygraphs, one double-headed gamma camera, three
single-head gamma camera, 250 mobile X-ray machines,
1,200 non-invasive monitors and 2,000 cardioversion
monitors.
In total, 3,553 machines at a value of
$72,762,694.
I personally participated in negotiations with
these two companies for these purchases.
The prices discussed for each piece of equipment
implied significant price reductions, given the
quantity – the items for both Cuba and Venezuela
together - and the fact that they were to be paid
for in cash. It would not be possible to urgently
acquire the goods as required, particularly in that
country, given the accumulated needs of the poorest
sectors of its total population, which numbered 27
million people at that time.
The most complex equipment were destined for the
Advanced Technology Centers, the less sophisticated
and plentiful items for the Barrio Adentro Diagnosis
Centers, although they were not the only ones to use
this equipment. Almost all of them were purchased at
the beginning of 2006.
I became seriously ill at the end of July of that
year. Philips supplied items until the end of 2006.
In 2007, it stopped completely: not a single item
was supplied.
In March of that year, a Cuban delegation was
sent to Brazil where the Philips headquarters for
Latin America – the branch that negotiated with Cuba
– is located. They began to explain their
difficulties. The Bush government had requested
detailed information on equipment supplied to Cuba
by their company, alleging that some of them
contained programs and, occasionally, components
bearing a yanki patent, and Philips provided
the information requested on the purchases made by
Cuba and Venezuela. There had never been any problem
with that before.
The director of Philips in Brazil textually
informed the Cuban delegation: "There is brutal
intransigence on the part of the U.S. government in
relation to regulations regarding equipment and the
request for permits with respect to Cuba.
"I know that the problem is affecting the
Comandante’s plan. Our organization is being
affected and threatened. All our organizations are
very scared." He immediately reiterated: "They are
very scared."
Finally, they added that they wished to cooperate
and find solutions.
In mid-July 2007, in a so-called White House
Conference on the Americas, Bush, the secretary of
state, and other U.S. government leaders "talked
nineteen to the dozen" according to an AP report, on
issues of education and healthcare. It seemed unreal.
They were promising to distribute healthcare
services throughout Latin America.
They placed special emphasis on the Confort, a
former aircraft carrier converted into the "biggest
hospital boat in the world," according to the report,
which was to visit each country in this hemisphere
south of the United States for 10 days at a time.
That was their healthcare program. What they did not
say at the time, was that, in Venezuela, they were
sabotaging the most serious healthcare program ever
proposed for a Third World country.
Despite the coincidence of the timing, at that
moment I did not wish to directly tackle the Philips
problem. The company had promised to resolve the
problem the following March. I still held out the
hope that it could be rectified.
I limited myself to writing in that very
Reflection: "The problem is that the United States
cannot do what Cuba is doing. On the contrary, it is
brutally pressuring the manufacturing companies of
the excellent medical equipment that is being
supplied to our country to prevent them from
replacing certain computer programs or providing
some spare parts that are under U.S. patents. I
could cite concrete cases and the names of the
companies. It is repugnant…"
Despite Philips’ solemn promise to Cuba, the rest
of 2007 passed by, as well as the whole of 2008 and
half of 2009 without a single piece of equipment
arriving from that company.
In June 2009, after paying a fine of 100,000
euros to the Barack Obama government, not so distant
from the practices of his illustrious predecessor,
Philips deigned to communicate that it was about to
provide equipment for Cuba.
On the other hand, nobody has recompensed the
Cuban people, or the Venezuelan patients of our
doctors in the Barrio Adentro program and those
attending the Advanced Technology Diagnostic Centers
for the human damages that have occurred.
As is logical, we have not acquired a single
piece of equipment from Philips since the last
purchase in early 2006.
On the other hand, we have cooperated with
Venezuela in purchasing medical equipment worth
hundreds of millions of dollars for its national
healthcare network, with a wide range of
sophisticated state of cutting-edge equipment from
other prestigious European and also Japanese
companies. I wanted to believe that that company
would make an effort to meet its commitment.
Venezuela now possesses modern equipment in its
public hospital network; the richest private clinics
will only have been able to acquire some of them.
Now, all the rest will depend on the country’s
efficiency in its services. The Venezuelan president
is seriously interested in achieving this objective.
I believe that it will do so very well if it
mitigates the Venezuelan custom of purchasing U.S.
medical equipment, not on account of its quality –
which is very good although with less demanding
regulations than those of Europe – but because of
what lies at the heart of the policy of this
country, capable of blocking the supply of equipment
as it did with Cuba.
Of course, we have dispatched to the Venezuelan
Diagnosis Centers, the Advanced Technology Centers
and others where our doctors are in attendance,
equipment of known international makes such as
Siemens, Carl Zeiss, Drager, SMS, Schwind, Topcon,
Nihon Kohden, Olympus and other European and
Japanese companies, some of which were founded more
than 100 years ago.
Now that Bolívar’s homeland, which Martí asked to
serve, is more threatened than ever by imperialism,
the organization, work and efficiency of our efforts
must be greater than ever; not just in the
healthcare sector, but in all the fields of our
cooperation.

Fidel Castro Ruz
September 6, 2009
7.17 p.m.
Translated by Granma International
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Reflections
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Fidel
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