At a time when the international financial
schemes have shown their unfeasibility,
the agreement reached at the Alliance with regard to the Unitary
System (instead of single-monetary system) for Regional
Compensation (SUCRE for its Spanish acronym) that will come into
force on January 1st, 2010, was very important.
Thus, the group made up by Venezuela, Cuba,
Bolivia, Nicaragua, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, Honduras,
Ecuador, Dominica and Antigua and Barbuda, established a
financial mechanism that will make it possible to give up
dependence on the devalued US dollar. Congratulations!
Similar importance has the fact that this forum
has established the fundamental principles that will govern the
Peoples’ Trade Agreement (TCP) to develop regional trade based
on complementary aid, solidarity and cooperation “to live well”.
The document, an initiative of the summit’s host,
Bolivian President Evo Morales, is even more significant when
compared to the negative effects the inclusion of Mexico in the
North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) with the United
States and Canada has brought to Mexicans.
The Summit was an excellent opportunity to expose
the developed countries’ responsibility in the climate debt,
while participants demanded mechanisms of compensation for those
countries that preserve, protect and maintain their forests.
Likewise, it condemned the US economic blockade
of Cuba, when there were only a few days left for the debate
that in this regard will take place at the UN General Assembly;
it repudiated the coup d´état in Honduras, which was described
as an attempt against the very same Alliance-Agreement; and
rejected the presence of US military bases in Colombia, a danger
to The Americas.
At the end of the event, participating heads of
state held a warm meeting with delegates at the 1st Summit of
Social Movements, which carried out its sessions simultaneously
-a fact that evidences that joint work between political and
social spheres is possible.
Two centuries after the first liberation cries in
the homelands of Simon Bolivar and Jose Marti…, the heads of
state gathered in Cochabamba reaffirmed their commitment of
moving forward to achieve independence, liberation,
self-determination, and the union the Latin American and
Caribbean peoples are claiming for.
These are elements proving the relevance of the ALBA model.