First: After the aggression on Iraq, there is no United Nations
Organization, understood as a useful and diverse forum, based on the respect for
the rights of all and also with guarantees for the small States.
It is
living through the worst moment of its already forthcoming 60 years. It pales,
it pants, it feigns, but it does not work.
Who
handcuffed the United Nations named by President Roosevelt? President
Bush.
Second: US troops will have to be withdrawn from Iraq.
After
the life of over 1,000 American youths was uselessly sacrificed to serve the
spurious interests of a clique of cronies and buddies, and following the death
of more than 12,000 Iraqis, it is clear that the only way out for the occupying
power faced with a revolting people is to recognize the impossibility of
subduing them and to withdraw. In spite of the imperial monopoly over
information, the peoples always get to the truth. Someday, those responsible and
their accomplices will have to deal with the consequences of their actions in
the face of History and their own peoples.
Third: For the time being, there will be no valid, real and useful reform
to the United Nations.
It
would take the superpower, which inherited the immense prerogative of governing
an order conceived for a bipolar world, to relinquish its privileges. And it
will not do so.
Since
now, we know that the anachronistic privilege of the veto will remain; that the
Security Council will not be democratized as it should or expanded to include
Third World countries; that the General Assembly will continue to stand ignored
and that at the United Nations there will be more actions driven by the
interests imposed by the superpower and its allies. We, as non-aligned
countries, will have to entrench ourselves in defending the United Nations
Charter – because, otherwise, it will be redrafted with the deletion of every
trace of principles such as the sovereign equality of States, non-intervention
and the non-use or the threat to use force.
Fourth: The powerful collude to divide us.
The
over 130 underdeveloped countries must build a common front for the defense of
the sacred interests of our peoples, of our right to development and peace. Let
us revitalize the Non-Aligned Movement. Let us strengthen the G-77.
Fifth: The modest objectives of the Millennium Declaration will not be
accomplished. We will reach the fifth anniversary of the Summit in a worse
situation.
• We
endeavored to halve by 2015 the 1.276 billion human beings in abject poverty
that existed in 1990. There had to be a yearly reduction of 46 million poor
people. However, excluding China, between 1990 and 2000 extreme poverty rose by
28 million people. Impoverishment does not decline, it grows.
• We
wanted to halve by 2015 the 842 million starving people recorded in the world.
There had to be a yearly reduction of 28 million. However, there has barely been
a reduction of 2.1 million hungry people per year. At this rate, the goal would
be attained by 2215, two hundred years after what was envisaged – and only if
our species survives the destruction of its environment.
• We
proclaimed the aspiration to achieve universal primary education by 2015.
However, more than 120 million children, 1 in every 5 in that school age, do not
attend primary school. According to UNICEF, at the current rate the goal will be
accomplished after 2100.
• We
endeavored to reduce by two-thirds the mortality rate in children under five
years of age. The reduction is symbolic: out of 86 children who died per 1,000
live births in 1998, now the figure is 82. Every year, 11 million children
continue to die of diseases that can be prevented or cured, whose parents will
rightfully wonder what our meetings are for.
• We
said that we would pay attention to Africa’s special needs. However, very little
has been done. African nations do not need foreign advice or models, but
financial resources and access to both markets and technologies. Assisting
Africa would not be an act of charity, but an act of justice; it would be
tantamount to settling the historical debt resulting from centuries of
exploitation and pillage.
• We
undertook to put a halt to and start reverting the AIDS pandemic by 2015.
However, in 2003 it claimed nearly 3 million lives. At this rate, by 2015 some
36 million people will have died of this cause.
Sixth: Creditor countries and the international financial agencies will
not seek a just and lasting solution to the foreign debt.
They
prefer to keep us in debt; that is, vulnerable. Therefore, even though we have
paid off US$ 4.1 trillion in debt service over the last 13 years, our debt
increased from US$ 1.4 trillion to US$ 2.6 trillion. It means that we have paid
three times what we owed and now our debt is twice as much.
Seventh: We, as underdeveloped countries, are the ones that finance the
squandering and the opulence of developed countries.
While
in 2003 they gave us US$ 68.400 billion in ODA, we delivered to them US$ 436
billion as payment for the foreign debt. Who is helping who?
Eighth: The fight against terrorism can only be won through cooperation
among all nations and with respect for International Law, and not through
massive bombings or pre-emptive wars against “dark corners of the world.”
Hypocrisy and double standards must cease. Sheltering three Cuban-born
terrorists in the United States is an act of complicity to terrorism. Punishing
five Cuban youths who were fighting terrorism, and punishing their families, is
a crime.
Ninth: General and complete disarmament, including nuclear disarmament,
is impossible today. It is the responsibility of a group of developed countries
that are the ones that most sell and buy weapons.
However, we must continue to strive for it. We must demand that the over
US$ 900 billion set aside every year for military expenditures be used on
development; and
Tenth: The financial resources to guarantee the sustainable development
for all the peoples on the planet are available, but what is lacking is the
political will of those who rule the world.
A
development tax of merely 0.1% on international financial transactions would
generate resources amounting to almost US$ 400 billion per annum.
The
cancellation of the foreign debt incurred by underdeveloped countries would
allow these to have available for their development no less than US$ 436 billion
on a yearly basis – money which is currently used to pay off the
debt.
If
developed countries complied with their commitment to set aside 0.7% of their
Gross National Product as ODA, their contribution would increase from the
current US$ 68.400 billion to US$ 160 billion per annum.
Finally, Excellencies, I want to clearly express Cuba’s profound
conviction that the 6.4 billion human beings on this planet – who have equal
rights according to the United Nations Charter – urgently need a new order in
which the world is not left in suspense, as is the case now, awaiting the
outcome of the elections in a new Rome in which only half the voters will
participate and nearly US$ 1.5 billion will be spent.
There
is no discouragement in our words, I must say so clearly. We are optimistic
because we are revolutionaries. We have faith in the struggle of the peoples and
we are certain that we will accomplish a new world order based on the respect
for the rights of all; an order based on solidarity, justice and peace,
resulting from the best of universal culture and not from mediocrity or gross
force.
About
Cuba, which cannot be detoured from its course by blockades, threats,
hurricanes, droughts or human or natural force, I will not say anything.
Next
28 October, for the 13th time, this General Assembly will debate and vote on a
resolution about the blockade imposed against the Cuban people. Once again,
morality and principles will defeat arrogance and force.
I
would like to conclude by recalling the words spoken right here 25 years ago by
President Fidel Castro:
“The
noise of weapons, of the menacing language, of the haughtiness on the
international scene must cease. Enough of the illusion that the problems of the
world can be solved by nuclear weapons. Bombs may kill the hungry, the sick and
the ignorant, but bombs cannot kill hunger, disease and ignorance. Nor can bombs
kill the righteous rebellion of the people…”
Thank
you very much.