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Dear people of Havana who, by your selfless, tenacious efforts
and in hard-fought competition with the inhabitants of Villa Clara,
Matanzas, Cienfuegos, Camagüey and Granma, won the right to
hold this official function here in the capital: I congratulate you
all.
Fighters of yesterday and
today:
Distinguished guests:
Dearest fellow Cubans:
I thank our generous and heroic people for the
privilege of commemorating this anniversary of the assault on the “Moncada” and
“Carlos Manuel de Cespedes” garrisons when so much time has passed since those
events took place. It could be that no one has even received such a great honor.
It would be unforgivable not to keep in mind that more than 70 percent of the
Cubans who today keep the Revolution alive had not even been born back then.
They took the banners which, I think, they will never drop, from those who gave
their lives in that action. I dare to say thank you on my behalf and on behalf
of all of them, because on my conscience lies the enormous weight of having
persuaded them to undertake such a bold action and yet fate has not prevented me
from traveling the long, long road of revolutionary struggle down to this
emotional moment 52 years later.
The Revolution today is experiencing a moment worthy
of that memorable date.
The months preceding the 52nd anniversary
of the beginning of our armed struggle for
Cuba’s final independence have characterized
by an exceptional degree of hostility directed by the Bush administration
against Cuba. The Nazi-Fascist extreme right that has
taken control of the Empire has not ceased to brood over its powerless hatred of
our country. We should remember that May 20,
2002 when, at a
meeting with the Miami terrorist mob, Bush demanded with unprecedented
insolence that Cuba get a new constitution which would
renounce the socialist nature of the Revolution. Those attending that meeting
included Orlando Bosch Avila, a bosom friend of that family dynasty, and the
main culprit behind the mid air destruction of the Cuban plane just minutes
after it took off from Barbados where all of the passengers
died.
Cuba’s response to the imperial demand were enormous
mass demonstrations all across the country in support of a draft amendment of
the constitution, finally passed unanimously by the National Assembly of
People’s Power on June 26, 2002, stating that the socialist nature of the
Revolution and the political and social system enshrined in the Constitution
were irrevocable.
The atrocious September 11,
2001 terrorist
attack on New York’s Twin Towers had already
happened.
Under pressure from that mob which had helped him win
the presidency through a scandalous fraud, for more than four years, Mr. George
W. Bush and his cronies did not cease for one minute from adopting cruel,
hate-filled measures to destabilize and pound on Cuba and to try to do away with
its independence and its people’s right to a truly human and fair political
system.
Hideous resolutions were passed to tighten the
blockade and suffocate Cuba’s economy. Hundreds of thousands of
Cubans living in the United States were forbidden to visit their relatives in
Cuba; they could only get permission to do so once every three years; family aid
was reduced to almost nothing; the agreements on illegal immigration were
breached; proposals for cooperating in such crucial areas as drug and persons
trafficking and to hinder and prevent terrorist acts were rejected. Also,
slanderous allegations rained down. Cuba was labeled a terrorist country. They
made up insane lies about biological weapons production, plans to use electronic
warfare to interfere with US government communications and other such things,
the objective being to find excuses for a genocidal attack against our country,
like they one they later launched in Iraq.
It is common knowledge that Bush’s cronies set up a
big committee to plan all the details of what they call “transition” in
Cuba. This committee drafted a gruesome plan
which included vaccination programs and literacy campaigns when the whole world
knows that Cuba’s health and education plans are much
better than those in the United
States and any other country in the
world.
I couldn’t help mentioning these things which are
only a small sample of the series of attacks on Cuba by US governments and of
all these governments, the Bush administration represents the incarnation of the
most repugnant, evil hatred for a heroic, decent people which is not cowed nor
can be intimidated by the powerful empire’s threats and
attacks.
One of Bush’s most cynical measures was to use the
Guantanamo naval base, which the Unites States occupies illegally against our
people’s will, to set up a concentration camp where he locks up, without trial
or any kind of legal process, those whom he kidnaps anywhere in the world. And
to top it all, that prison was turned into an experimental center of torture,
the same as those later applied in the Abu Ghraib prison in
Iraq.
An article in the October 17,
2004 edition of The New York Times admitted that abuse of
prisoners in the Guantanamo naval base is “generalized and not
limited to isolated cases as official versions claim”. Quoting soldiers, secret
agents and other officials, the newspaper described “a series of highly abusive
procedures which continued over a long period of time”. The world was amazed and
shocked to hear about these unbelievable facts.
Democratic
senator Joseph Biden, of the Foreign Relations Committee, said that the
Guantanamo naval base had
become the “greatest propaganda tool
that exists for recruiting of terrorists around the world”. Former president
Jimmy Carter urged the Bush government to close the prison because the
accusations of torture there are a “terrible embarrassment and a blow to
the US reputation".
On September 13,
2004, the British newspaper The Guardian
revealed that “the highest levels of George W. Bush’s administration were
informed of the bad treatment and possible war crimes at the base in the Fall of
2002”, according to an investigative report by veteran journalist Seymour Hersh
included in his book Chain of
Command.
When visiting
this torture center, a US member of Congress of Cuban descent, known in our
country as the Big Bad She-wolf, a friend and defender of Posada Carriles, told
the press that “she wished the Cuban people had the rights that the detainees in
Guantanamo are given”.
Another of Mr.
Bush’s cynical actions is the constant, increasing radio and television attacks
on our people that violate the most elementary standards regulating the use of
radio and TV frequencies and is in breach of international
law.
The
US government has
invested vast amounts of money to no avail in this crazy, failed
exercise.
In addition to
its actions from outside, Bush and his mob have invested in excess one hundred
million dollars to promote subversion and destabilization inside
Cuba. More than any
other US administration
it has used that country’s Interests Section in
Cuba to do this.
There was a time, years ago, when subversion and espionage were carried out
rather discretely but in Bush Jr. truly gangster-like era, all standards have
been thrown overboard. Disgusting characters like James Cason, following the
instructions of Otto Reich, Roger Noriega and other unscrupulous officials, have
gone beyond the limits of basic decency and carried out unprecedented
provocations inside our country.
The heads of the
Interests Section have assumed direct leadership of the groups of mercenaries
that, by various methods and under various pretexts, are provided with high
personal incomes in convertible currency which, in a country like Cuba where
services such as healthcare and education are totally free and others like
housing, recreational activities, medicines and a significant portion of food
cost a virtually symbolic amount in Cuban pesos, means that those who have
convertible currency can enjoy a living standard far higher than that of Cubans
who are paid their salaries and pensions in domestic currency.
There is no
country in the world where the empire’s mercenaries enjoy the privileges they do
in Cuba. None of them
works or does any useful service whatsoever for society. The US Interests
Section offices and residence in Cuba, protected by
diplomatic immunity, have become the venues for meetings to organize
provocations, facilitate communications and openly give orders to mercenaries
inside the country.
And none of this
is done surreptitiously. The Interests Section’s diplomatic pouch is brazenly
used to smuggle in computers, communications equipment, printed materials,
libelous articles and all kinds of objects and goods to give to their hirelings.
Never, perhaps, has any government so abused and offended its diplomatic status
and immunity as the US government by
writing signs and exhibiting offensive placards attacking our
country.
When, for some
reason or other, they don’t want to be directly involved in this type of
activity, they use their Czech or some such lackeys to carry out these extremely
rude acts.
Our Interests
Section in Washington and our
officials have never, ever, used their diplomatic immunity for such illegal and
disgusting acts.
In the last few
days, while our people were working tirelessly to clean up the damage caused by
Hurricane Dennis —tens of thousands of homes fully or partially destroyed,
breaks in the electricity transmission and distribution grid, major damage to
agriculture and other branches of the economy— the US government stepped up its
subversive radio and television broadcasts to Cuba by increasing the frequency
of illegal, provocative flights by the EC-130J aircraft which transmits the
anti-Cuban radio and television signals.
The first
broadcast from a US armed forces
aircraft took place on none other than May 20,
2003, a date in history singled
out for imperialist interference in Cuban affairs. Later on, from August 2004
onwards, once the loathsome “Transition Plan” allocating millions of dollars for
radio and television broadcasts attacking
Cuba was approved,
the US government
began four-hour transmissions from the military aircraft every weekend. In so
doing, it has not only interfered with our television broadcasts, but has
grossly violated international telecommunication standards while posing a
dangerous provocation because of the military nature of the aircraft which has
been previously used by the United States in actions against Viet Nam,
Afghanistan and Iraq.
This past July
13, less than three weeks ago, five days after the hurricane had blown through
the south, central and western regions of our country with its enormous power of
destruction, the US Air Force transferred two EC-130J aircraft from the 193rd
Special Operations Wing in Pennsylvania to the Naval
Air station in Key
West, Florida. One of these
planes flew consecutively on Friday July 15, Saturday 16, Monday 18, Wednesday 20,
Friday 22 and Saturday 23, broadcasting counterrevolutionary broadcasts in an
escalation of provocation and aggression.
It was only six
days after the hurricane and information about its devastating effects was still
being collected.
Thus, in less
than a year, there have been 46 broadcasts from the military aircraft while the
daily broadcasts on nine frequencies, from the aerostatic balloon, have
continued. These, and transmissions from other counterrevolutionary stations add
up to 2,425 hours and 45 minutes of anti-Cuban radio and television
broadcasts.
It is
significant that, prior to the current escalation, the United States carried out
three exploratory flights with RC-135 aircraft on Saturday April 30 and on May 7
and 14, 2005, at the same time the EC-130 was broadcasting to our country, their
possible intention being to test the effectiveness and the parameters of our
response to this television attack. It had been years since RC 135s had taken
any action against our country.
While the US
administration, which so furiously imposes the genocidal blockade on our
country, in an entirely hypocritical and shameless way “compassionately” offered
Cuba 50,000 USD to alleviate the damage caused by the hurricane, the lawmakers
who support the Bush government policies, introduced a bill in Congress that
would allocate 37,931,000 USD for the fiscal year 2006 and 29,931,000 USD for
the fiscal year 2007, for anti-Cuban broadcasts. According to the wording, the
purpose of the bill is “to buy, rent, build and improve radio and television
reception and transmission facilities and to buy, rent and install the necessary
equipment, including aircraft, for radio and television reception and
transmission”.
There has even
been talk that they might purchase Boeing type aircraft that use technology
similar to that of the EC-130J for future broadcasts to Cuba and they also want
still more money to buy airtime on radio stations in the area close to our
country.
The escalation
in anti-Cuban broadcasts is happening in the midst of public disagreement
between the Departments of State and Defense over whether to use military
aircraft to broadcast to Cuba or to transfer
them to the Middle
East. The outcome shows that
Condoleezza Rice’s position and the aggressive plans of the
US administration,
which stem from the pressure of, commitments to and influence of the
Miami terrorist mob,
have prevailed.
Dazed and
delirious, a former spokesperson for the Cuban-American National Foundation and
also one of Posada Carriles’ defenders has just brazenly announced on Miami
television that Venezuela’s solidarity aid to Cuba to alleviate the effects of
the hurricane “consists of a few thousand tons of masts to block US
transmissions, equipment to rebuild the masts used for this type of jamming and
the technology needed to establish repression”.
Such an
abhorrent vision prevails in the US extreme right
which is now also threatening to begin radio and television broadcasts to
Venezuela, as a response
to Telesur and to the
Venezuelan government’s solidarity with
Cuba.
According to
Florida Republican Congressman Connie Mack, who introduced an amendment on this,
“the Broadcasting Board of Governors
could be authorized to initiate radio and television broadcasts similar to Radio
and TV Martí’s current broadcasts to
Cuba”.
With
the same intensity as that shown by the White House in stepping up its
electronic warfare, local radio and TV stations in
Miami
go to a lot of trouble to convey an image of crisis and chaos in
Cuba
where an unsustainable situation will lead to social upheaval. Whosoever listens
to those media terrorists would be inevitably “convinced” that the Revolution
has only a few hours left, which shows that these people never learn the lessons
of history.
There
have also been one or two foreign correspondents in
Havana
who have been swept up, consciously or unconsciously, by the current of
provocation and treachery.
At
almost the same time on July 13, only five days after the hurricane, about
twenty members of the small groups I mentioned, shouted out insulting slogans as
they walked outside the “Hermanos Ameijeiras” hospital. They were using the
pretext of the tugboat accident that happened 11 years ago, which caused the
regrettable death of a number of people including women and children, for which
the Revolution was infamously blamed; the tug had been hijacked by armed persons
at the dock where this type of vessel ties up. This provocation elicited an
immediate, angry response from those living nearby and from hospital workers,
which meant that the provocateurs had to be given protection by the
authorities.
I
should give a little more background. When the country was involved in a
historic battle for justice with the Empire as it denounced the covert entry of
Posada Carriles —he and Orlando Bosch were responsible for the deaths of 73
people in the well-known Barbados tragedy— into the United States, under the
protection of the Cuban-American mob and US authorities, and demanded his arrest
and extradition to Venezuela, the Interests Section was working frantically to
organize a so-called Assembly to Promote a Civil
Society in Cuba officially
convened for none other than May
20, a shameful, ill-starred date in our history. The whole thing was cooked up
and funded by the US
government.
Cuba’s
denunciation made on April 11 and the meeting in Havana of outstanding people
from all over the hemisphere to demand the terrorist extradition to Venezuela
and to denounce “Operation Condor” and the monstrous crimes committed by US
soldiers with the US government’s complicity —especially when Bush Sr. was head
of the CIA and later US vice president coinciding with the dirty war against
Nicaragua and the Iran-Contra scandal— put the Bush government and its main
accomplices in a tight spot.
Before
the Barbados
terrorist act, Orlando Bosch and Posada Carriles, who took part in “Operation
Condor”, were given the responsibility for planning and organizing serious
crimes against well-known Chileans and people from other Latin American
countries.
It
was obvious that the USINT (US Interests Section) and its hirelings aim was to
orchestrate an act of provocation against the authorities of the Cuban
Revolution in order to divert international attention from the scandalous
conspiracy and complicity between Bush Jr. and the hemisphere’s biggest
terrorist that Bush had taken out of jail in Panama and allowed to enter the
United States.
This
so-called “Assembly to Promote a Civil
Society in Cuba” was graced with the presence of the head of
the US Interests Section and it even received a personal message from Bush and
terrorist groups in Miami.
Even Posada Carriles himself, who had not been arrested yet, sent his greetings
and support to the “Assembly to Promote a Civil
Society in Cuba”. All
information on and the impact of this grotesque meeting are on record and in due
time will be made available to the public. The fact is that the Revolution’s
equanimity and sang froid wrecked
this ridiculous maneuver but not without a great effort to contain the anger of
the people living nearby who could not understand our tolerance of this
mercenary, traitorous meeting.
When, this past
July 22, all efforts were focused on rebuilding the country, “civil society’s
defenders” —emboldened by the seeming impunity of their adventures, cheered on
by the Interests Section and greatly encouraged by the almost daily flights and
broadcasts from the military aircraft with their subversive messages, plus the
belief spread by the Miami mob that they were on the point of packing their bags
because the Revolution was about to collapse— plucked up their courage to
orchestrate a new act of provocation. But, this time the people, angrier than
before over such barefaced acts of treason, intervened with patriotic fervor and
didn’t allow a single mercenary to move. And this is what will happen whenever
traitors and mercenaries go a millimeter beyond the point that our Revolutionary
people, whose destiny and lives are at stake in this stand-off with the most
voracious, most inhuman and most cruel empire in history, is willing to
accept.
The much
publicized dissidence or alleged opposition in
Cuba does not exist
except in the overheated imagination of the Cuban-American mob and White House
and State Department bureaucrats. They deceive themselves or intoxicate
themselves with their own lies. They pay opportunists, people divorced from all
productive activity or useful service, often vagrants and frequently underclass
or criminals who do not have anyone’s esteem or support. Over and over again
situations arise in which the
authorities have to protect them when these people try to orchestrate some act
of provocation; then the first thing the Interest Section does is to invite the
foreign press.
The same thing
happened when they invaded the country with armed mercenaries, many of whom were
former Batista backers, assuming that the people would instantly rise up against
the Revolution. Nobody knows these people in
Cuba, they live off
publicity abroad. The terrorist mob and the US government shamelessly take
advantage of the facilities which Cuba has provided so that many international
press agencies and correspondents can live in and send reports from Cuba without
any restrictions whatsoever so that they can move around and act with complete
freedom. Some in fact do so in total complicity with the US Interests Section in
order to misinform and deceive the world about what happens in
Cuba. Everyone knows
full well that no revolutionary process has ever had the consensus and
overwhelming support and trust that the Cuban Revolution has because of its
steadfastness and fidelity to its principles and because of the gallantry,
internationalist spirit and solidarity of the Cuban
people.
It would be much
better if the Empire did not allow itself to be carried away by illusions that
might lead it to more serious mistakes, because nothing that has happened
elsewhere will be comparable to what would happen here to anyone who tries to
take control of Cuba.
A long time ago
now, more than a century ago, Maceo warned them: “They will only reap her
blood-soaked soil, if they do not perish in the strife”. Today we could add: “They would not even
reap the dust of her soil, and they would have to shed much more blood than
anywhere else on the planet”. This we swear!
I don’t want to let this occasion pass by without
raising some other issues of great importance to our people.
During the first six months of this year, the country
had to face a complex situation brought about by the drought, the power shortage
and, most recently, the consequences of Hurricane Dennis.
The enemies of the Revolution, as I have already
explained, have jubilantly tried to use these events to show that
Cuba is going through a serious economic
crisis. They never learn and are once again underestimating our people’s
capacity to resist and struggle.
The sound growth that our economy has started to
display since last year has increased during the first half of 2005, as I can
show with some irrefutable figures which confirm this and I will now read
out:
During the first half of the year the Cuban economy
grew by 7.3% and an increase of around 9% is expected by the end of the year, as
a result of the positive tendencies that have been observed.
This performance, recorded up until June, is based on
the increase of 13 of the 22 sectors of the industry, among which ferrous
metallurgy stands out with 15.5%, non-ferrous metallurgy with 9.2%; printing
with 21.7%; the garments industry with 7.0%; the food industry with 3.6% and the
beverage and tobacco industry with 4.4%.
Construction work increased by 8.2%, the
communication sector by 7.1%, commerce by 10% and the public service sector by
13.3%.
The equivalent production of national crude oil and
gas turns out around one million 900 thousand tons, that is to say, four times
more than what was produced at the beginning of the special period. At the
moment, a significant effort is being made to drill and set underway new oil and
gas wells that will put the country closer on its way to self-sufficiency in
terms of the energy sector.
Crude refining increased by 9.2%, making way for a
saving of 29 million 700 thousand dollars on the total amount of refined
products, when compared to their international prices. Fuel consumption, on the
other hand, stayed at similar levels to the year before.
The production of electricity fell by 4% due both to
the breakdowns in the electricity generating plants, and to the extension of
their maintenance periods, which affected production and service, as well as the
population.
In order to maintain these plants, the hard currency
resources to be invested until December 2005 have doubled, exceeding the sum of
100 million USD.
A program is underway to improve the country’s power
supply, with an additional 50 million USD to be invested in this program, 34% of
this investment has been made in the first five months.
This program will make it possible to reduce the
total loss in power distribution
from approximately 16.5% to 11%, and increase the quality of the
service.
A profound revolution is underway with respect to the
concept of production and the use of electricity. Equipment and material worth
282 million 100 thousand USD have been bought and are currently being installed,
which, within a year, will provide us with a million more kilowatts of
electricity.
I am using the US dollar here so that it is easier to
understand the cost in convertible pesos. This aforementioned figure of new
capacities of electricity production will be supplemented by 200 thousand
kilowatts generated by a new combined cycle plant and a currently out of use
thermoelectric plant adapted to consume
accompanying gas. This new
capacity, on top of the saving of no less that one million kilowatts which will
be made possible by investing more than 250 million USD, will make available to
production, services and family units twice the electricity they have now,
starting on the second semester of 2006.
Along with the problem of electricity, it has been
necessary to resolve the need for domestic fuel. Personally, as President of the
Council of State and of the Government, I dedicate a significant part of my time
to this problem, so what I said is not an exaggeration, as rather I speak with
circumspection, keeping some things up my sleeve.
More that 3 million 100 thousand pressure cookers, 3
million 500 rice steamers, 3 million 100 thousand electric pressure cookers, 3
million 800 thousand electric hobs and one million 100 thousand 12-inch fans
have also been purchased.
More than 5 million 300 thousand gaskets for
refrigerators, 650 thermostats and 7 million gaskets for coffee makers have also
been bought. This range of equipment and accessories, which are already being
distributed in a gradual and attentive manner, will continue to be handed out
during the second half of the year, as planned.
More than 100 million USD are being invested in the
pharmaceutical industry. Production in this sector is steadily
growing.
Work is underway to expand and remodel the factories
producing soy bean yogurt, gradually increasing its production capacity to one
million liters a day.
Work is being done and money invested in order to
process 25 thousand tons of drinking chocolate a year. It is estimated that the
level of production for the remainder of the year is 12 tons to be distributed
among the population.
As part of the program of quality coffee production,
30 packaging machines, 2 new roasters and the replacement of 7 mills, which have
already been ordered, are to be introduced and assembled in the plants currently
functioning. In August distribution will commence in some provinces, in
accordance with the established capacity.
In order to expand, guarantee and ensure the storage
of cereals and legumes, the construction of capacities is underway for half a
million tons of top quality metallic silos.
Work is also underway to expand the production
capacity of pasta.
The current industries pertaining to the People’s
Power will be expanded in order to produce noodles and 15 similar new factories
will be constructed.
Two new pasta factories will be built on the sites of
the former mills “Noel Fernández” in Camagüey and “Marta Abreu” in
Cienfuegos. A new pasta production line will be
installed in the Vita Nuova factory, producing 750
kilograms an hour, and the Buona Sera factory in
Santiago
de Cuba will be subject to
modernization.
The total capacity will be 70 thousand tons of
different varieties of pasta.
The purchase of two new cocoa processing plants is
anticipated, each with a capacity of 25 thousand tons.
Besides satisfying national needs, this decision will
allow us to produce high quality cocoa butter for export, as well as other cocoa
derivatives.
As part of the policy to improve our people’s diet, a
program is implemented to increase egg production. The aim is to reach an output
of more than 2.2 billion eggs by 2006.
A series of investments has been decided upon to
increase the availability of pork meat. Work is being done to recover the
capacity of pork production, with a view to reaching a total production of 80
thousand tons of meat, in live animals, by 2006 and to preparing conditions to
reach 100 thousand tons by 2007.
The areas of protected and semi protected crops will
be considerably expanded in order to produce high quality vegetables for both
national consumption and export.
During the first half of the year, nickel production
reached 38 thousand 200 tons, which is an increase from the year before. This
export was the most important source of income for the country in terms of the
export of goods, amounting to 545 million USD in the first half of the
year.
The number of people visiting the country until June
30 had increased by 8%, and it is anticipated that this year the number of
bookings will reach 2 million 300 thousand.
The income from the tourist sector increased by 11.5%
compared with the year before, with a linear occupation level of
66.9%.
During 2005, 4 new hotels are scheduled to begin
operations, which will contribute one thousand 921 rooms to the international
tourist sector.
The electronics industry is doubling its production
of software and televisions.
In this half of the year, the production of cement
and steel rods increased by 20.8% and 5%, respectively.
With a view to responding to the most urgent needs to
increase our building capacity, investments have been approved which are now
being made to the tune of 62 million USD, which will increase the production of
sand by 51%, stone by 74%, blocks
by 59% and floor materials by 49%.
Currently, 7 thousand 300 homes have been completed
in 2005. During the remaining months of this year the majority of homes
partially affected by Hurricane Dennis will be repaired; no less than 10
thousand of the homes destroyed will be built again as new and the plans to
finish and construct new homes to cover the most urgent requirements will
continue, up to at least 30 thousand additional housing.
The material required to build a total of 100
thousand new homes in 2006 has already been or is in the process of being
ordered, which will be by far the highest number in our history. This figure
does not include a high number of repairs. Everything will depend on our
efforts.
From 2003 until May 2005, the country was in the grip
of the worst drought on record. The economic impact of this is estimated at more
that 1.2 billion USD.
To deal with this, until 2004, 183 million USD were
invested in hydraulic works, and this year it is calculated that an additional
60 million will be used.
It has also been necessary to invest more than 70
million USD in current expenditure, which includes 28 thousand tons of diesel
and 14 thousand tons of gasoline, with the specific aim of taking water to the
affected population, which exceeded 2 million 500 thousand people at the most
critical times, distributing water by trucks to almost 2 million
people.
In order to keep the economy healthy, it is essential
to revitalize railway transport, which was seriously affected during these years
of the special period. The special period and the blockade imposed by the
United
States dealt a harsh blow to railway transport, close to
the point of collapse.
This year around 40 million USD are being urgently
invested in railway freight transport. Actually, 32 freight cars have been
repaired, while 18 locomotives and almost a thousand more cars should be
restored to working order in the next few months to transport dry goods and
cement for the works of the Battle of Ideas and the program for the construction
of housing.
Presently, 12 new locomotives were bought from
China that will arrive this
November.
The amount cargo transported by railway rose by
47,900 tons in comparison to the first half of last year.
As for freight transport by motor vehicle, 486 trucks
that were out of service have been repaired and are up and
running.
In the first half of the year, the Ministry of
Transport vehicle fleet transported 66 thousand 100 tons more than in the same
period of 2004.
Port equipment, metal for railway tracks and
equipment and spare parts for trucks have been purchased or are in the process
of being purchased for 15 million USD.
One thousand modern busses for long distance
transport, with fuel efficient engines have been ordered from
China. 200 have already arrived in the country
and are being used in areas where they are most needed. It is calculated that
this year busses will transport almost 3 million more passengers than
anticipated.
Inevitably, it will be imperative to review the
fares, since the high cost of fuel and equipment will make it impossible to
provide this service at the historically charged prices.
In the healthcare sector, investments received a
significant boost during the first six months, which could never have happened
in the past. The 448 rehabilitation wards that the country required were all
completed.
Major repairs have been made to 123 polyclinics. Of the 444 existing polyclinics,
almost all are now equipped with electrocardiographs, 396 have, for the first
time, been given ultrasound equipment with three transducers, and 115 have new
X-ray equipment. All of them will be equipped with endoscope facilities; every
one of them now has 4 computers and a library, and 368 are connected to the
Internet.
Since January 2004, 118 intensive therapy wards have
been created in the municipalities that did not have it, where until February
2005, 42 thousand 561 patients had been provided care, the lives of 13,025 of
whom were saved, that is to say, 92% of those who were at risk of
death.
The dental clinics have been equipped with 851 new
dentists’ offices.
More than 50 hospitals are currently being renovated,
expanded and equipped to offer excellent services to both national and foreign
patients. The program began in 2004 with an estimated cost of 835 million USD,
which includes the latest equipment valued at approximately 400 million
USD.
Among the high-tech equipment that we now have at our
disposal, is the 27 one-slice CT equipment, with which all the provinces of the
country are now equipped, 9 other 64-slice equipment, 8 of magnetic resonance
imaging and 8 of three-dimensional ultrasound, which are being used for the
first time in Cuba.
This program comes hand in hand with the construction
of 44 buildings offering hospital accommodation, which will provide a total of
6,886 rooms. Numerous three and four-star hotels will also be used in the
provision of an international health service.
The country is now able to operate and provide
services in all branches of ophthalmology to hundreds of thousands of patients.
One hundred thousand Venezuelan brothers and sisters will receive theses
services this year, in which, until yesterday, July 25, 25,024 patients from
said country and a similar number of Cubans had been operated
on.
No less than 15 thousand citizens of the
Caribbean community will receive this form of medical care
between the second half of June 2005 and June 2006.
Venezuela and
Cuba have offered to provide another 100
thousand Latin Americans with this service within the same period. This is a
feat of solidarity and humanity unprecedented in the history of the
world.
The educational revolution that our country has been
carrying out in the heat of the Battle of Ideas has brought about an increase in
quality that is also unprecedented in the educational and learning
process.
In this sector, major repairs have been made to 111
large schools and work continues on 56 more, as well as on 5 Pedagogical
Institutes.
Major repairs also began on 25 polytechnics for
computer sciences, with a capacity for 40 thousand students, as well as 15
senior high schools in the province of La
Habana, of the 40 that will receive this repair work. The
cost of these programs amounts to more than 120 million
USD.
Additionally, 118 Youth Computer Clubs were completed
in the first six months of this year, at a cost of 21 million
USD.
At the end of the present academic year, 1,197 works
had been completed by the program for the Battle of Ideas, which benefit 503,174
students. Major repairs are being made to 16 Special Sport Schools, at a cost of
over 14 million 600 thousand USD; one has already been completed, while work is
still underway in another 113.
Meanwhile, 20 more university chapters were
established in prisons, with some 590 students.
As proof of the potential of our economy, in May the
minimum wage went up from 100 to 225 pesos, benefiting 1,657,191 workers that
account for 54% of state employees, costing an annual total of 1.06 billion
Cuban pesos. At the end of the first half of the year the average wage rose to
334 pesos, from 282 at the end of 2004.
In July wages rose in the healthcare and education
sectors, which benefited 857 thousand 400 workers, at an annual cost of more
than 523 million Cuban pesos.
In the Social Security sector the pensions of
1,468,000 people went up, just over 97% of the total number of
pensioners.
In the area of Social Assistance, 476, 512 people
benefited from an increase of 50 pesos monthly. Both measures annually cost 1.19
billion Cuban pesos.
These actions have benefited 4.4 million people,
which accounts for 30.9% of the population, at an annual cost of 2.78 billion
Cuban pesos. Wages continue to increase gradually in other sectors.
The export of goods and services grew by 26.3% in the
first six months of the year as compared to the same period in
2004.
The favorable balance in the trade of services
managed to compensate for the imbalance of the exchange of goods, resulting in a
modest positive balance in the trade figures, even higher than the year before.
With regard to the export of goods, nickel stands out
for its importance, as do generic and biotechnological medication, tobacco and
raw sugar, insofar as the services sector, medical and tourist services play a
decisive role.
These results are achieved in the midst of a process
of reorganizing foreign commerce, in which the number of companies authorized to
import goods decreased from 192 to 89 and in which 67% of all the country’s
imports are concentrated on 23 entities, also reducing the participation of
middlemen by 26% over the last two years.
In response to an economic policy which ensures that
social interests and the fundamental priorities of the country are met, a set of
measures has been adopted in the monetary sector, aimed at strengthening the
national currency. By mid 2003 the US dollar ceased being used in inter-company
transactions and an exchange control system was established in the Central Bank
for external operations. In November of 2004,
in
response to the threats made by the United States Government, the US dollar was
also withdrawn from circulation in the chain of hard currency shops and a fine
of 10% was applied to the exchange of this currency, a measure which was
instituted offering maximum facilities to the population and without affecting
their bank deposits.
At the beginning of this year, these actions were
complemented by the act of revaluing the Cuban peso, with respect to the Cuban
convertible peso, by 7%, with which the purchasing power of the Cuban peso
increased in the chain of hard currency shops. Additionally, the Cuban
convertible peso was revalued by 8% with respect to the US dollar and other hard
currencies.
These measures have strengthened our monetary
sovereignty and have brought about a greater equality between the social strata
who receive income in different currencies. Now all currencies in circulation
are issued by the Central Bank of Cuba, unlike in the past, when a part of it
was issued by the monetary authority of a country that has imposed an iron
blockade on Cuba.
Some practical effects of this have been: an increase
in savings made in Cuban pesos of 32%, compared to September of last year, which
reflects a stronger credibility of the national currency; a rise in the ratio of
deposits made in Cuban convertible pesos from the total amount of hard currency
savings accounts, going from 20% to 50%; and a significant increase in the hard
currency received by the Central Bank.
In this way it was possible to substantially reduce
the participation of the dollar in the country’s total inflow of hard currency
in cash. In the past, the participation of the US dollar exceeded 90%, whereas
now it maintains a rate of around 30%, which basically reduces the risk caused
by threats made by the United States Government.
This year a rational centralization of decisions
concerning the use of hard currency has been established. Authorization for
these transactions must be obtained before obligations are contracted, which has
led to a more effective process of contracting and a greater commitment to
honoring the payment. Furthermore, this has contributed considerably to the
fight against crime and corruption. It has also helped to make important
decisions to get rid of the commercial middlemen that are not representative in
international commerce, whose activity brought about a disproportioned increase
in the prices of the goods and services that the country purchases
abroad.
By way of this process, the State’s hard currency
income was concentrated in the Central Bank, thus increasing the possibility of
using it, which has notably strengthened the negotiating capacity of the
socialist State, with the resulting benefits in commercial and financial
management. It has also made it possible to rigorously fulfill the obligations
created by the new external financial commitments and the renegotiated debt,
which has allowed us to access new credit facilities in more favorable
conditions.
Finally, as part of the agreements emanating from
ALBA, an affiliate of a Cuban bank has been opened in
Venezuela and the creation of an affiliate of a
Venezuelan bank in Cuba has been given the
go-ahead.
For the first time since the beginning of the special
period, in 2004 the balance of day-to-day operations was surplus, due mainly to
the notable increase in the services exported. A more favorable result drawing
from a higher income for services rendered is anticipated for the present
year.
It is calculated that by June 30, sales in hard
currency shops will have reached a figure 6.1% higher than that of the year
before.
The agreement between the
Bolivarian Republic of
Venezuela and the
Republic of Cuba, signed in accordance with the principles
of ALBA, means a considerable step forward on the way to unity and the true
integration of the peoples of Latin America and the Caribbean. The Petrocaribe agreement is another extraordinary
advancement and a true example of fraternal solidarity among
peoples.
The commercial exchange between
Venezuela and
Cuba has already risen this year to no less
than 3 billion USD.
Both countries will undoubtedly be the two that
experience the most economic growth in the hemisphere this
year.
Because of these noble, constructive and peaceful
efforts, the imperialist government is accusing
Venezuela and
Cuba, Chávez and Castro, of destabilizing and
subverting other countries in the region.
Faced with such accusations against
Venezuela and
Cuba, and if President Chávez agreed, a day
like today would be most opportune to reply: Condemn us, it doesn’t matter,
history will absolve us! |