Taken from
CubaDebate
LATIN Americans are not innate
criminals and neither did they invent drugs.
The Aztecs, Mayas and other pre-Columbian
peoples of Mexico and Central America, for example,
were excellent agriculturalists and knew nothing
about coca cultivation.
The Quechuas and Aymaras were
capable of producing nutritive foods on perfect
terraces which followed the curves of the mountain
levels. On altiplanos sometimes in excess of 3-4,000
meters high, they cultivated quinoa, a cereal rich
in protein, and potatoes.
They also knew and cultivated the
coca plant, the leaves of which they have chewed
since time immemorial in order to alleviate the
rigor of the heights. It was a millennial custom
practiced by peoples with products such as coffee,
tobacco, liquor and others.
Coca came originally from the steep
mountain slopes of the Amazonian Andes. Their
inhabitants knew it long before the Inca empire
whose territory, in its maximum splendor, extended
over the current territory of southern Colombia, all
of Ecuador, Peru, Bolivia, eastern Chile and
northeastern Argentina; close to two million square
kilometers.
The consumption of coca leaves
became a privilege of the Inca emperors and the
nobility in religious ceremonies.
When the empire disappeared after
the Spanish invasion, the new masters encouraged the
traditional habit of chewing coca leaves in order to
extend the working days of the indigenous labor
force, a right that lasted until the UN Single
Convention on Narcotic Drugs prohibited the use of
coca leaves, except for medical or scientific
purposes.
Almost all countries signed it.
Barely any health related issue was discussed. The
trafficking of cocaine had not yet reached its
current enormous magnitude. Extremely serious
problems have been created in the years that have
passed since, which demand profound analyses.
On the thorny issue of the
relationship between drugs and organized crime the
UN itself delicately affirms that Latin America is
inefficient in combating crime.
Information published by distinct
institutions is varied, given that the matter is a
sensitive one. The data are sometimes so complex and
varied that they can lead to confusion. However,
there is not the slightest doubt that the problem is
rapidly worsening.
Almost six week ago, on February 11,
2011, a report published in Mexico City by that
country’s Citizens’ Council for Public Safety and
Criminal Justice, provided interesting data on the
50 most violent cities in the world, on the basis of
homicides committed in 2010. It confirms that Mexico
furnishes 25% of them. For the third consecutive
year No. 1 falls to Juarez, on the border with the
United States.
It goes on to say that, "… in that
year the rate of criminal homicides in Juarez was
35% higher than that of Kandahar, Afghanistan – No.
2 in the ranking – and 941% higher than that of
Baghdad…"; in other words, almost 10 times that of
the Iraqi capital, a city at No. 50 on the list.
It almost immediately adds that the
city of San Pedro Sula in Honduras lies in third
place with 125 homicides for every 100,000
inhabitants; only exceeded by Juarez, in Mexico,
with 229; and Kandahar in Afghanistan, with 169.
Tegucigalpa, Honduras, is in sixth
place, with 109 homicides for every 100,000
inhabitants.
Thus, it can be observed that
Honduras, with the yankee Palmerola airbase, where a
coup d’état took place during Obama’s presidency,
has two cities among the six in which the most
homicides in the world take place. The rate in
Guatemala City stands at 106.
According to the abovementioned
report, the Colombian city of Medellín, with 87.42
likewise figures among the most violent in the
Americas and the world.
U.S. President Barack Obama’s speech
in El Salvador and his subsequent press conference,
obliged me to publish these lines on the issue.
In my March 21 Reflection I
criticized his lack of ethics for not even
mentioning in Chile the name of Salvador Allende, a
symbol of dignity and courage for the world, who
died as the consequence of a coup d’état promoted by
a president of the United States.
As I knew that the following day he
was to visit El Salvador, a Central American country
symbolic of the struggles of the peoples of Our
America, which has suffered the most as a result of
U.S. policy in our hemisphere, I said, "There he
will have to invent a lot, because in that sister
Central American nation the weapons and advisors
that it received from his country were responsible
for much bloodshed."
I wished him bon voyage and "a
little more good sense." I have to admit that, on
his lengthy tour, he was a little bit more careful
during the final stretch.
Monsignor Oscar Arnulfo Romero was a
man admired by all Latin Americans, believers or
non-believers, as were the Jesuit priests cowardly
assassinated by the henchmen that the United States
trained, backed and armed to the teeth. In El
Salvador, the FMLN, a militant left-wing
organization, waged one of the most heroic struggles
on our continent.
The Salvadorian people gave the
victory to the Party which emerged from the heart of
those glorious combatants, whose profound history
remains to be constructed.
What is urgent is to confront the
dramatic dilemma being experienced by El Salvador,
just like Mexico, the rest of Central America and
South America.
Obama himself stated that
approximately two million Salvadorians live in the
United States, equivalent to 30% of the country’s
population. The brutal repression unleashed on
patriots and the systematic plunder of El Salvador
imposed by the United States obliged hundreds of
thousands of Salvadorians to emigrate to that
territory.
What is new is that the desperate
situation of Central Americans has been compounded
by the immense power of terrorist gangs,
sophisticated weapons and the demand for drugs,
created by the U.S. market.
In his brief remarks preceding those
of the visitor, the President of El Salvador stated
textually, "I insisted to him that the issue of
organized crime, drug trafficking, citizen
insecurity is not an issue that solely concerns El
Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras or Nicaragua, or even
Mexico or Colombia; it is an issue which concerns us
as a region, and in that context we are working on
building a regional strategy, via the CARFI
Initiative."
"…I insisted to him that this is an
issue that cannot be approached solely from the
perspective of pursuing crime by strengthening our
police and armies, but also by emphasizing crime
prevention policies and therefore, the best weapon
for combating crime in itself, in the region, is by
investing in social policies."
In his response, the U.S. leader
said, "President Funes is committed to creating more
economic opportunities here in El Salvador so that
people don’t feel like they have to head north to
provide for their families."
"I know this is especially important
to the some 2 million Salvadoran people who are
living and working in the United States."
"…I updated the President on the new
consumer protections that I signed into law, which
give people more information and make sure their
remittances actually reach their loved ones back
home.
"Today, we’re also launching a new
effort to confront the narco-traffickers and gangs
that have caused so much violence in all of our
countries, and especially here in Central America. "
"…we’ll focus $200 million to
support efforts here in the region, including
addressing, as President Funes indicated, the social
and economic forces that drive young people towards
criminality. We’ll help strengthen courts, civil
society groups and institutions that uphold the rule
of law."
I do not need any more words to
express the essence of a painfully sad situation.
The reality is that many young
Central Americans have been led by imperialism to
cross an inflexible and constantly more impassable
border, or to provide services to the millionaire
drug trafficking gangs.
Would it not be more just – I wonder
– to have an Adjustment Act for all Latin Americans,
like the one invented almost 50 years ago now to
punish Cuba? Will the number of persons who die
crossing the U.S. border and the tens of thousands
who are dying every year in the nations to which you
are offering an "Alliance of Equals" continue to
grow ad infinitum?

Fidel Castro Ruz
March 25, 2011
8:46 p.m.