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A
Brilliant and Courageous Statement
Attending to other
matters that are now top priority, I momentarily strayed from
the frequency with which I had been writing reflections in the
year 2010; however, Hugo Chávez Frías’ proclamation last
Thursday the 30th, obliges me to write these lines.
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The president of Venezuela is one of the men who has done
the most for the health and education of his people; since
these are subjects where the Cuban Revolution has
accumulated the most experience, we gladly collaborate to
the maximum with this sister country in both areas.
It is by no means a matter of that country lacking doctors;
quite the opposite. They had an abundance of doctors, among
them there were even first-class professionals, just as in
other Latin American countries. It is a social matter. The
best medical doctors and the most sophisticated equipment
could be placed at the service of private medicine, as it is
in all capitalist countries. And often not even that,
because in underdeveloped capitalism, like the type that
used to exist in Venezuela, the wealthy class had sufficient
means to go to the best hospitals in the United States or
Europe, something that was and is customary and nobody
can deny it.
Even worse, the United States and Europe have been noted for
seducing the best specialists from any exploited Third World
country to abandon their homeland and to emigrate to the
consumer societies. Training doctors for that world in the
developed countries implies fabulous sums of money that
millions of poor Latin American and Caribbean families would
never be able to pay. In Cuba, that used to happen until the
Revolution took up the challenge, not just of training
doctors capable of serving our own country, but also the
other peoples of Latin America, the Caribbean or the world.
Never have we stolen the intelligences of other peoples. On
the contrary; in Cuba we have trained tens of thousands of
doctors and other top-level professionals, for free, in
order to send them back to their own countries.
Thanks to the profound Bolivarian and Marti-inspired
revolutions, Venezuela and Cuba are countries where health
and education have been extraordinarily developed. Every
citizen has the real right to receive general education and
professional training at no cost, something that the United
States has not been able to ensure for all its inhabitants.
The reality is that the government of that country invests a
billion dollars every year on its military machine and its
war adventures. Furthermore, it is the greatest exporter of
weapons and the instruments of death and the greatest market
for drugs in the world. Because of this traffic, tens of
thousands of Latin American lives are lost every year.
It is such a real and well-known fact that more than 50
years ago, a president having military origins bitterly
denounced the decisive power accumulated by the
military-industrial complex in that country.
These words would be superfluous if it were not for the
intervention of the hateful and repugnant campaign unleashed
by the massive Venezuelan oligarchy media, at the service of
that empire, using the health problems being experienced by
the Bolivarian President. We are united to the President
with close and indestructible bonds of friendship that came
into being from his first visit to our homeland on December
13th, 1994.
Some were surprised by the coincidence of his visit to Cuba
with the necessity of seeking medical care. The Venezuelan
President visited out country with the same aim that took
him to Brazil and Ecuador. He had no intention of receiving
medical care in our homeland.
It is well-known that for a few years now, a team of Cuban
health specialists are providing their services to the
Venezuelan President who, loyal to his Bolivarian
principles, never considered them to be undesirable
foreigners, but sons and daughters of the Great Latin
American Homeland on behalf of which The Liberator fought,
right up to his last living breath.
The first contingent of Cuban doctors left for Venezuela
when the Vargas Stadium tragedy occurred, taking thousands
of this noble country’s lives. This action of solidarity was
nothing new; it made up a tradition well-established in our
country from the first years of the Revolution, from the
time almost half a century ago when Cuban doctors were sent
to recently-independent Algeria. That tradition grew
stronger while the Cuban Revolution, in the midst of a cruel
blockade, was training internationalist doctors. Countries
such as Peru, Somoza’s Nicaragua and
other countries in our hemisphere and in the Third World
were suffering from tragedies as a result of earthquakes or
other causes that required Cuba’s solidarity. So, our
country became the nation in the world that had the highest
rate of doctors and specialized health personnel, with
extremely high levels of experience and professional
capabilities.
President Chávez put a great emphasis in relating with our
health personnel. This way, a bond of confidence and
friendship was born between him and the Cuban doctors who
were always very sensitive to the treatment of the
Venezuelan leader; and he was able to create thousands of
health centres and outfit them with the necessary equipment
in order to provide free services for all Venezuelans. There
was no other government in the world that did so much, in
such a short time, for the health of its people.
A large percentage of Cuban health personnel provided
services in Venezuela and many of them also acted as
teachers in certain subjects that were being taught to train
more than 20,000 young Venezuelans who began to graduate as
medical doctors. Many of them began their studies in our
country. The internationalist doctors, members of Battalion
51, graduates of the Latin American School of Medicine, have
earned solid prestige in carrying out complicated and
difficult missions. On these bases my relations in this
field with President Hugo Chávez were built.
I should add that in the course of more than twelve years,
since February 2, 1999, the president and leader of the
Venezuelan Revolution has not rested one single day and thus
he occupies a unique place in the history of this
hemisphere. All of his energy has been dedicated to the
Revolution.
One could say that for every extra hour Chávez dedicates to
his work, the president of the United States rests for two
hours.
It was difficult, almost impossible, that his health would
not suffer some sort of breakdown and this is what happened
in the last few months.
He is a person used to the rigors of military life and he
would stoically put up with the aches and pains that were
plaguing him with ever increasing frequency. Given the
friendly relations developed and the constant exchanges
between Cuba and Venezuela, added to my personal health
experience that I underwent since the proclamation of July
30, 2006, it is not unusual that I should have noticed the
need for a strict medical check-up for the President. He is
far too generous in granting me any special merit in this
matter.
Of course, I admit that it was no easy task that I set for
myself. It wasn’t difficult for me to notice that he had
some health problems. Seven months had gone by since his
last visit to Cuba. The medical team devoted to caring for
his health had pleaded for me to take up the matter. From
the very first moment, the President’s attitude was one of
informing the people, with complete clarity, about the state
of his health. That was why, at the point by then of
returning, via his minister of Foreign Affairs, he informed
the people about his health up to that instant and he
promised to keep them informed in detail.
Each treatment was accompanied by rigorous cellular and
laboratory analyses, of the kind that are done under such
circumstances.
One of the tests, several days following the first surgery,
showed results that determined more radical surgery and
special treatment for the patient.
In his dignified message on June 30th, the noticeably
recovered President speaks about the state of his health
with absolute clarity.
I admit that it was no easy task for me to inform my friend
about the new development. I could see the dignity with
which he received the news that --while his mind was dealing
with so many important tasks, among them the celebrations
commemorating the Bicentennial and the formalization of the
agreement on Latin American and Caribbean unity – much more
than the physical suffering that radical surgery would
imply, signified a test, as he put it, that he compared to
the difficult moments he had to face in his lifetime as an
unyielding combatant.
Along with him, the team of persons caring for him and who
he described as sublime fought a magnificent battle which I
have witnessed.
With no hesitation whatsoever, I state that the results are
impressive and that the patient fought a decisive battle
that shall lead him and Venezuela along with him, to a great
victory.
One has to make sure that his declaration is communicated
word for word in every language, but especially it should be
translated and subtitled into English; this is a language
that can be understood on this Tower of Babel into which
imperialism has transformed the world.
Now the external and internal enemies of Hugo Chávez are at
the mercy of his words and his initiatives. Without a doubt
there shall be surprises in store for them. Let us wish him
our most steadfast support and trust. The lies of the empire
and the treason of the quislings shall be defeated. Today
there are millions of militant and aware Venezuelans who
shall never be made to submit to the oligarchy and the
empire.
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