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Esteemed Comandante Daniel Ortega,
President of Nicaragua,
Distinguished presidents and high
representatives,
The facts speak clearly for themselves. In 2005,
we used to pay 250 dollars for every ton of rice
we imported; now we pay 1,050 dollars, four
times as much. For a ton of wheat, we used to
pay 132 dollars; now we pay 330 dollars, two and
a half times as much. For a ton of corn, we used
to pay 82 dollars; now we pay 230 dollars,
nearly three times as much. For a ton of
powdered milk, we used to pay 2,200 dollars; now
it's 4,800 dollars. This is a perverse and
unsustainable trend.
This phenomenon undermines the internal markets
of most countries in our region and around the
world, affecting the population directly,
particularly the poorest sectors, bringing
poverty to millions of people. A few decades
ago, there were countries that grew their own
rice and corn. But, following the neo-liberal
recipes of the IMF, they liberalized the market
and began to import subsidized US and European
cereals, eradicating domestic production. With
the rise in prices at the pace we've mentioned,
a growing number of people can no longer afford
to eat these basic food products. It comes as no
surprise, thus, that they should resort to
protests, that they should take to the streets
to find whatever means they can to feed their
children.
As Fidel underscored in 1996 during the World
Food Summit, "hunger, the inseparable companion
of the poor, is born of the unequal distribution
of riches and of the world's injustices. The
rich do not know hunger". "Millions of people
around the world have perished in their struggle
against hunger and injustice".
The food crisis we face today is exacerbated by
high oil prices and by the impact that the
military adventure in Iraq has upon these; by
the effect these prices have on the production
and transportation of food; by climate change;
by the fact that significant volumes of US and
EU-grown grains and cereals are destined, more
and more, to the production of biofuels and by
the speculative practices surrounding
transnational big capital, which gambles with
food inventories at the cost of hunger for the
poor.
But the essence of the crisis is not to be found
in these recent phenomena; it lies, rather, in
the unequal and unfair distribution of riches at
the global level and in the unsustainable
neo-liberal economic model that has been imposed
upon us in an irresponsible and fanatical
fashion over the course of the last twenty
years.
Poor countries, dependent on food imports, are
in no condition to take the blow. Their
populations have no protection whatsoever and
the market, needless to say, has neither the
capacity nor the sense of responsibility to
offer such protection. This is not a strictly
economic problem. It is a humanitarian drama of
incalculable consequences which even places our
countries' very national security at risk.
To attribute the crisis to increased consumption
by important sectors in certain developing
countries that report accelerated economic
growth, such as China and India, is not only an
unfounded argument, it also conveys a racist and
discriminatory message, which portrays as a
problem the fact that millions of human beings
should have access, for the first time, to
decent and healthy food.
The problem, as it manifests itself in our
region, is, in essence, linked to the precarious
situation of small farmers and rural populations
living in underdeveloped countries, and to the
oligopolistic nature of the large transnational
companies that control the agricultural food
industry.
These companies control prices, technologies,
norms, certifications, distribution channels and
sources of funding for world food production.
They also control transportation, scientific
research, genetic pools and the fertilizer and
pesticide industries. Their governments, in
Europe, North America and other parts of the
world, set down the international norms that
govern trade in food, technologies and the
supplies needed to produce these.
Agricultural subsidies in the United States and
the European Union not only make the food these
countries sell more expensive, they also
constitute a fundamental obstacle for developing
countries seeking to access their markets with
their products, something which has a direct
impact on the situation of agriculture and
producers in the South.
This is a structural problem generated by
today's international economic order, not a
passing crisis that can be alleviated with
palliative or emergency measures. The World
Bank's recent promises to destine 500 million
devalued dollars as an emergency measure to
alleviate the crisis are ridiculous and an
insult to our intelligence.
To strike at the very heart and at the causes of
the dilemma, we must examine and change the
written and unwritten rules, both agreed to and
imposed upon us, that today govern the
international economic order and the creation
and distribution of wealth, particularly in the
food production and distribution sector.
Today, the truly decisive move is to undertake a
profound, structural change of the current
international economic and political order, an
order which is anti-democratic, unjust,
exclusive and unsustainable. An order which is
predatory, as a result of which, as Fidel said
twelve years ago, "waters are contaminated, the
atmosphere is poisoned and nature is destroyed.
It is not only the fact that investments,
education and technologies are lacking or the
population is growing at an accelerated pace;
the environment is being degraded and the future
is menaced more and more every day".
Having said this, we agree that international
cooperation, as a means of confronting this time
of crisis, can no longer be postponed. We need
emergency measures to quickly alleviate the
situation of those countries which already face
social turmoil. In the middle term, we must also
give impetus to cooperation and exchange plans
that entail joint investments and accelerate
agricultural production and food distribution in
our region, through the firm commitment and
resolute participation of the State. Cuba is
willing to modestly contribute to efforts of
this nature.
The program brought to us today by comrade
Daniel, a call to join forces and wills and to
combine the resources of ALBA members and
countries in Central America and the Caribbean,
is worthy of our support. It presupposes the
clear understanding that the current food crises
the world faces is not an opportunity, as some
believe, but a very dangerous crisis. It entails
the express recognition that our efforts must be
aimed at defending everyone's right to food and
at securing a decent life for the millions of
peasant families that have been plundered to
this day, not at availing ourselves of the
occasion to pursue corporate interests or petty
commercial opportunities.
We have debated on the matter extensively. Now,
it is time to act with unity, audacity,
solidarity and a practical spirit. If this is
our common goal, you can rely on Cuba.
Allow me to conclude with the farsighted words
Fidel pronounced in 1996, which reverberate
today with undiminished pertinence and
profundity: "The bells that toll today for those
who starve to death each day shall toll tomorrow
for the whole of humanity if it refuses to or is
unable to be sufficiently wise to save itself".
Thank you very much.
07-05-2008 |