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In a message to
Evo Morales from the National Assembly and the
Council of State, the people of Cuba recognized
that both he and his people, one of the poorest
and most exploited in the hemisphere, are facing
new and enormous challenges which call for the
greatest possible solidarity from both Latin
American and the world.
During the
talks, the Cuban Government expressed its
willingness to promote a program enabling the
provision of ophthalmic treatment to the five
million poor patients in Latin America and the
Caribbean estimated to need eye surgery every
year.
Cuba also
indicated its readiness to start immediate
cooperation with the efforts of the new president
aimed at eradicating illiteracy among all his
compatriots.
For his part,
Evo Morales, Bolivia's President Elect by an
overwhelming majority, expressed his determination
to address the poverty and exploitation of that
combative people.
Both nations are
resolved to fight for the unity and integration of
the brotherly peoples of Latin America and the
Caribbean and for peace and friendship among all
peoples of the world. As steps preparatory to the
taking of office by President Elect Evo Morales,
whose term will commence as soon as the Bolivian
leader assumes the presidency of his nation, and
the legal and constitutional powers that come
with it, the two countries have agreed on
immediate cooperative measures for further
implementation after January 22, 2006, as follows:
1:
To establish a non-profit Cuban-Bolivian entity
with the mission of providing high-quality
ophthalmic surgery free of charge to all Bolivian
citizens unable to afford the extremely high fees
associated with such services, thereby avoiding a
situation in which every year tens of thousands of
poor Bolivians could lose their eyesight or suffer
serious and often incapacitating impairment of
their vision.
2:
Cuba will provide leading-edge technology
equipment together with the ophthalmologists
needed for the initial stage; these specialists,
supported by young Bolivian doctors trained at the
Latin American School of Medical Sciences (ELAM)
as residents, or other residents and doctors from
Bolivia other countries, will provide care of the
highest quality to the Bolivian patients.
3:
Cuba will pay the salaries of these specialists.
4:
Bolivia will provide the facilities required for
these services, which may be premises already in
use for medical purposes or adapted for such.
5:
The National Ophthalmology Institute, recently
equipped by Cuba for eye surgery and staffed
partly by Cuba with ELAM-graduate Bolivian
specialists and residents, who have already
performed surgery on 1,536 Bolivians, will have
two additional surgical facilities, in Cochabamba
and Santa Cruz respectively. The La Paz
Ophthalmology Center will have a capacity of 100
operations daily, while the Cochabamba and Santa
Cruz clinics will each handle half that number.
These facilities combined will be able to perform
eye surgery on at least 50,000 people annually.
This overall capacity may be increased should
Bolivia decide to offer ophthalmologic services to
poor patients in neighboring countries near the
Bolivian centers.
6:
Cuba
offers Bolivia 5,000 full scholarships for
training doctors and specialists in comprehensive
general medicine and other medical disciplines:
2,000 during the first quarter of 2006, who are
already undergoing basic preparation in Cuba; 2000
in the second half of the year, and 1,000 in the
first quarter of 2007. In later years, the quotas
thus established will be filled by new candidates.
The numbers mentioned do not include the 497
Bolivian youths already studying medicine at
medical science faculties in Cuba.
7:
Cuba will provide Bolivia with the know-how,
teaching materials and technical facilities needed
for a literacy program covering the entire
relevant population. The two nations will work
together to complete the program within 30 months,
beginning July 2006.
8:
Cuba will provide Bolivia with details of the
experience with its energy-saving program.
9:
Cuba
will provide its full support for the development
of sports in Bolivia, in those disciplines of
interest to its people.
10:
The parties will seek ways to maximize academic,
scientific and cultural exchanges between the
Bolivian and Cuban peoples.
11:
Other
forms of beneficial, useful and constructive
cooperation between the two countries will be
considered.
These programs
will procure and accept international cooperation,
although the two countries undertake to implement
them with their own resources.
This agreement
is the initial stage of a wide-ranging process of
integration based on the principles of solidarity
and reciprocity.
|
Fidel Castro Ruz |
Evo
Morales |
|
President of the Council of
State and of the Council of Ministers of
Cuba. |
President Elect of Bolivia |
31-12-2005 |