Chávez, Evo and
Obama
Part
2
If our Nobel Prize winner is
deceiving himself – something that has yet to be
established – that perhaps explains the incredible
contradictions in his reasoning and the confusion
sowed among his listeners.
There is not a drop of morality, not
even of politics, in his attempt to justify his
announced decision to veto any resolution approved
supporting the recognition of Palestine as an
independent state and a member of the United Nations.
Even politicians who in no way share socialist ideas
and lead parties which were closely allied with
Augusto Pinochet support Palestine's right to full
membership in the UN.
Barrack Obama's words on the main
topic of discussion today in the organization’s
General Assembly can only be applauded by NATO, with
its artillery, missiles and bombings.
The rest of his speech consisted of
empty words, lacking moral authority and making no
sense. Let us observe, for example, how just how
vacuous they were. In a starving world, plundered by
transnational corporations and the consumerism of
developed capitalist countries, Obama proclaimed,
"To stop disease that spreads across borders, we
must strengthen our system of public health. We will
continue the fight against HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis
and malaria. We will focus on the health of mothers
and of children. And we must come together to
prevent, and detect, and fight every kind of
biological danger - whether it’s a pandemic like
H1N1, or a terrorist threat, or a treatable disease
"To preserve our planet, we must not
put off action that climate change demands. We have
to tap the power of science to save those resources
that are scarce. And together, we must continue our
work to build on the progress made in Copenhagen and
Cancun, so that all the major economies here today
follow through on the commitments that were made.
Together, we must work to transform the energy that
powers our economies, and support others as they
move down that path. That is what our commitment to
the next generation demands. And to make sure our
societies reach their potential, we must allow our
citizens to reach theirs."
Everyone knows that the United
States did not sign the Kyoto Protocol and has
sabotaged all efforts to protect humanity from the
terrible consequences of climate change, despite
being the country which consumes a considerable,
disproportionate part of the world's oil and natural
resources.
Let us make a record of the idyllic
words with which he attempted to beguile the state
leaders assembled there, "I know there’s no straight
line to that progress, no single path to success. We
come from different cultures, and carry with us
different histories. But let us never forget that
even as we gather here as heads of different
governments, we represent citizens who share the
same basic aspirations – to live with dignity and
freedom; to get an education and pursue opportunity;
to love our families, and love and worship our God;
to live in the kind of peace that makes life worth
living. It is the nature of our imperfect world that
we are forced to learn these lessons over and over
again.
"… Because those who came before us
believed that peace is preferable to war, and
freedom is preferable to suppression, and prosperity
is preferable to poverty. That’s the message that
comes not from capitals, but from citizens, from our
people. And when the cornerstone of this very
building was put in place, President Truman came
here to New York and said, "The United Nations is
essentially an expression of the moral nature of
man’s aspirations." The moral nature of man’s
aspirations. As we live in a world that is changing
at a breathtaking pace, that’s a lesson that we must
never forget.
"Peace is hard, but we know that it
is possible. So, together, let us be resolved to see
that it is defined by our hopes and not by our
fears. Together, let us make peace, but a peace,
most importantly, that will last.
"Thank you very much."
Listening to this until the very end
is worthy of more than gratitude; it merits a medal.
As I have already indicated, early
in the afternoon, it befell the President of the
Plurinational State of Bolivia, Evo Morales Ayma, to
take the floor and immediately address the essential
issues.
"…There is a clear difference over
the culture of life and the culture of death. There
is a clear difference over the truth in the face of
falsehoods, a profound difference over peace as
opposed to war.
"... I believe it is going to be
difficult to understand each other with economic
policies which concentrate capital in the hands of a
few. The facts show that 1% of the world's
population holds 50% of the wealth. If such profound
differences exist, how can poverty be reduced? And
if we do not eliminate poverty, how can we guarantee
a lasting peace?
"I remember perfectly well how as a
child whenever there was a rebellion of the people
against the capitalist system, against the economic
model based on the permanent plunder of our natural
resources, the union leaders, the political leaders
of the left were accused of being communists and
arrested. The popular movements were attacked
militarily: arrests, exile, massacres, persecution,
incarceration, accused of being communists,
socialists, Maoists, Marxist-Leninists. But now,
they have other tools, they make accusations of drug
trafficking and terrorism.
"... they plan interventions
whenever a president, a government, a people are not
pro-capitalist or pro-imperialist.
"... A lasting peace is spoken of.
How can there be lasting peace with U.S. military
bases? How can there be lasting peace with military
interventions?
"Of what use is the United Nations
if a group of nations here decides on interventions,
massacres?
"If we want this organization, the
United Nations, to have the authority to have its
resolutions respected, well, we have to begin
thinking about re-founding the United Nations…
"Every year the United Nations –
practically 100% of the countries, with the
exception of the United States and Israel – decides
to lift the blockade, end the economic blockade of
Cuba. And who respects this? Of course, the Security
Council is never going to respect this United
Nations resolution… I cannot understand how, in an
organization including all of the world's nations,
resolutions are not respected. What is the United
Nations?
"I would like to tell you that
Bolivia is not turning its back on the recognition
of Palestine in the United Nations. Our position is
that Bolivia welcomes Palestine to the United
Nations.
"You all know, dear listeners, that
I come from the Indigenous Campesino Movement and
when our families talk about a company, we assume
that that company has a lot of money, holds a lot of
money, they're millionaires. We can't understand how
a company could ask the state to lend it money for
its investments.
"That's why I say that these
international financial entities are the ones who do
business through private companies, but who has to
pay for it? Of course, it is the people, the states.
"... Bolivia has a historic demand,
of Chile, to return to the sea, to retake sovereign
access to the Pacific, with sovereignty. Therefore
Bolivia has made the decision to resort to
international tribunals, to demand useful, sovereign
access to the Pacific Ocean.
"Resolution 37/10 of the UN General
Assembly, November 15, 1982, establishes that
‘recourse to judicial settlement of legal disputes,
particularly
Referral to the International Court
of Justice, should not be considered an unfriendly
act between States.’
"Bolivia is protected by law and by
right has recourse to an International Court because
its confinement is the result of an unjust war, an
invasion. Demanding a solution in the international
arena represents for Bolivia the reparation of a
historic injustice.
"Bolivia is a peaceful state which
favors dialogue with neighboring countries, and for
that reason maintains open channels of bilateral
negotiation with Chile, without renouncing its right
to have recourse to an International Court…"
"The peoples are not responsible for
the maritime confinement of Bolivia, those
responsible are the oligarchies, the transnationals
which, as always, appropriate the peoples’ natural
resources.
"The 1904 Treaty did not contribute
to peace or friendship; it caused Bolivia’s lack of
access to a sovereign port for more than one
century."
"…in the region of the Americas
another movement of the countries of Latin America
and the Caribbean is being organized, I would say a
new OAS without the United States, in order to
liberate ourselves from certain impositions,
fortunately, with the little experience that we have
acquired in UNASUR. [... ] If there is a conflict
between countries, we no longer need [...] persons
coming from above and outside to impose order."
"I also want to take advantage of
this opportunity to address a central issue:
combating drug trafficking. Combating drug
trafficking is being utilized by U.S. imperialism
for purely political ends. The U.S. Drug Enforcement
Administration in Bolivia was not combating drug
trafficking, it was controlling drug trafficking for
political ends. If there was a labor leader, or an
anti-imperialist political leader, that’s why the
DEA was there: to implicate him or her. We saved
many leaders, many politicians from that kind of
dirty work by the empire to implicate us in drug
trafficking. They are still attempting to do just
that."
"In recent weeks certain media from
the United States were saying that the presidential
plane had been detained in the United States due to
traces of cocaine. How untrue! They are trying to
confuse the population, trying to promote a dirty
campaign against the government, even against the
state. However, what is the United States doing?
Decertifying Bolivia and Venezuela. What moral
authority does the United States have to certify or
decertify countries in South America or in Latin
America, when the United States is the world's prime
consumer of drugs, the prime producer of marijuana
in the world? [... ] What authority does it have to
certify or decertify? It is another means of
frightening or intimidating countries, trying to
teach countries a lesson. However, Bolivia is, very
responsibly, fighting drug trafficking.
"In the same U.S. report; that is to
say, of the Department of State of the United States
acknowledges a net reduction of coca cultivation;
that the interdiction has improved.
"But, where is the market? The
market is the origin of drug trafficking and the
market is here. And who decertifies the United
States because it has not reduced the market?
"This morning, President Calderón of
Mexico said that the drug market is still growing
and asked why there is no responsibility taken for
eradicating the market. [... ] Let’s fight under a
shared co-responsibility. [... ] In Bolivia, we’re
not afraid, and we have to end secret banking if we
want to make a frontal assault on drug trafficking."
"… One of the crises, on the margins
of the crisis of capitalism, is the food crisis.
[... ] We have a little experience in Bolivia:
giving credits with zero interest to rice, corn,
wheat and soy producers, and they can also pay their
debts with their products, such as food; or
accessible credits to encourage production. However,
the international banks never take small producers
into account, never take associations, cooperatives
into account and these can make a very good
contribution if they are given the opportunity. [...
] We have to end commerce which is based on
competitiveness.
"In a competition, who wins? The
most powerful, the one with the most advantages,
always the transnationals, and who are the small
producers, who are these families who wish to rise
up through their own efforts? [... ] Within a policy
of competition we are certainly not going to solve
the issue of poverty.
"But, finally, to end this speech, I
want to state that the crisis of capitalism is
already unpayable. [... ] The economic crisis of
capitalism is not circumstantial, but structural and
what are the capitalist or imperialist countries
doing? Seeking any pretext for intervening in a
country in order to recoup its natural resources.
"This morning, the President of the
United States said that Iraq has been liberated and
that they are going to govern themselves. The Iraqis
are going to be able to govern themselves, but in
whose hands is the Iraqis’ oil now?
"They welcomed it, they said that
autocracy in Libya was over, now it’s a democracy;
it can be a democracy, but in whose hands is Libya’s
oil going to be now? [... ] the bombardments were
not the fault of Gaddafi, the fault of certain
rebels, but because of seeking Libya’s oil."
"…Therefore, they want to overcome
it, their crisis, the crisis of capitalism, they
want to rectify it by recouping our natural
resources, on the basis of our oil, on the basis of
our gas, our natural resources.
"… we have an enormous
responsibility: defending the rights of Mother
Earth."
"…the best way of defending human
rights today is by defending the rights of Mother
Earth [...] here we have an enormous responsibility
in approving the rights of Mother Earth. Just over
60 years ago the Universal Declaration of Human
Rights was approved. Just over 60 years ago it was
recognized in the United Nations that human beings
have their rights as well. After political rights,
economic rights, the rights of the indigenous
peoples, now we have the enormous responsibility of
how to defend the rights of Mother Earth.
"We are also convinced that infinite
growth on a finite planet is unsustainable and
impossible, the limits on growth are the
degeneration of the Earth’s ecosystems. [... ] We
are calling for [...] a new decalogue of social
demands: in financial systems, over natural
resources, over basic services, over production,
over dignity and sovereignty and, on this basis, to
begin to re-found the United Nations, so that the
United Nations becomes the highest body for solving
issues of peace, issues of poverty, issues of the
dignity and sovereignty of the peoples of the
world."
"We hope that this experience as a
President might serve for something for all of us,
as I also have come to learn from many of you in
order to continue working for the equality and
dignity of the Bolivian people."
"Thank you very much indeed."
After the essential concepts of Evo
Morales, Mahmoud Abbas, President of the Palestinian
National Authority, who was granted speaking rights
two days ago, set out the dramatic sufferings of the
inhabitants of Palestine: "…the crass historical
injustice perpetrated against our people, for whom
it was deemed convenient to establish the state of
Palestine in just 22% of the territory of Palestine
and, above all, the Palestinian territory which
Israel occupied in 1967. Taking that historic step,
which was applauded by the states of the world,
allowed an excessive acquiescence in order to
achieve a historical contemporization, which would
allow peace to be attained in the land of peace."
"[... ] Our people will continue
popular, peaceful resistance to the Israeli
occupation, its settlements and its policy of
apartheid, as well as the construction of the racist
wall of annexation [... ] armed with dreams,
courage, hope and mottoes in the face of tanks,
teargas, bulldozers and bullets."
"… we want to extend a hand to the
Israeli government and people for the establishment
of peace, and I say to you: let us build together,
in an urgent way, a future for our sons and
daughters in which they can enjoy peace, security
and prosperity. [... ] Let us build relations of
cooperation based on parity, equity and friendship
between two neighboring states, Palestine and
Israel, instead of policies of occupation,
settlements, war and the elimination of the other."
Almost half a century has passed
since that brutal occupation promoted and supported
by the United States. However, barely a day passes
without the wall rising, monstrous mechanical
equipment destroying Palestinian homes and some
young or even adolescent Palestinian falling injured
or dead.
What profound truths were contained
in Evo’s words!

Fidel Castro Ruz
September 26, 2011
10:32 p.m.