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Where Have All the Bees Gone? And
Other Reflections on the Internationalization of Genocide
By Fidel Castro
04/-8/-7 "ICH"
-- -- The Camp David meeting has just come to an end. All of
us followed the press conference offered by the presidents of
the United States and Brazil attentively, as we did the news
surrounding the meeting and the opinions voiced in this
connection.
Faced with demands related to customs duties and subsidies which
protect and support US ethanol production, Bush did not make the
slightest concession to his Brazilian guest at Camp David.
President Lula attributed to this the rise in corn prices,
which, according to his own statements, had gone up more than 85
percent.
Before these statements were made, the Washington Post had
published an article by the Brazilian leader which expounded on
the idea of transforming food into fuel.
It is not my intention to hurt Brazil or to meddle in the
internal affairs of this great country. It was in effect in Rio
de Janeiro, host of the United Nations Conference on Environment
and Development, exactly 15 years ago, where I delivered a
7-minute speech vehemently denouncing the environmental dangers
that menaced our species' survival. Bush Sr., then President of
the United States, was present at that meeting and applauded my
words out of courtesy; all other presidents there applauded,
too.
No one at Camp David answered the fundamental question. Where
are the more than 500 million tons of corn and other cereals
which the United States, Europe and wealthy nations require to
produce the gallons of ethanol that big companies in the United
States and other countries demand in exchange for their
voluminous investments going to be produced and who is going to
supply them? Where are the soy, sunflower and rape seeds, whose
essential oils these same, wealthy nations are to turn into
fuel, going to be produced and who will produce them?
Some countries are food producers which export their surpluses.
The balance of exporters and consumers had already become
precarious before this and food prices had skyrocketed. In the
interests of brevity, I shall limit myself to pointing out the
following:
According to recent data, the five chief producers of corn,
barley, sorghum, rye, millet and oats which Bush wants to
transform into the raw material of ethanol production, supply
the world market with 679 million tons of these products.
Similarly, the five chief consumers, some of which also produce
these grains, currently require 604 million annual tons of these
products. The available surplus is less than 80 million tons of
grain.
This colossal squandering of cereals destined to fuel production
-and these estimates do not include data on oily seeds-shall
serve to save rich countries less than 15 percent of the total
annual consumption of their voracious automobiles.
At Camp David, Bush declared his intention of applying this
formula around the world. This spells nothing other than the
internationalization of genocide.
In his statements, published by the Washington Post on the eve
of the Camp David meeting, the Brazilian president affirmed that
less than one percent of Brazil's arable land was used to grow
cane destined to ethanol production. This is nearly three times
the land surface Cuba used when it produced nearly 10 million
tons of sugar a year, before the crisis that befell the Soviet
Union and the advent of climate changes.
Our country has been producing and exporting sugar for a longer
time. First, on the basis of the work of slaves, whose numbers
swelled to over 300 thousand in the first years of the 19th
century and who turned the Spanish colony into the world's
number one exporter. Nearly one hundred years later, at the
beginning of the 20th century, when Cuba was a pseudo-republic
which had been denied full independence by US interventionism,
it was immigrants from the West Indies and illiterate Cubans
alone who bore the burden of growing and harvesting sugarcane on
the island. The scourge of our people was the off-season,
inherent to the cyclical nature of the harvest. Sugarcane
plantations were the property of US companies or powerful
Cuban-born landowners. Cuba, thus, has more experience than
anyone as regards the social impact of this crop.
This past Sunday, April 1, CNN televised the opinions of
Brazilian experts who affirm that many lands destined to
sugarcane have been purchased by wealthy Americans and
Europeans.
As part of my reflections on the subject, published on March 29,
I expounded on the impact climate change has had on Cuba and on
other basic characteristics of our country's climate which
contribute to this.
On our poor and anything but consumerist island, one would be
unable to find enough workers to endure the rigors of the
harvest and to care for the sugarcane plantations in the ever
more intense heat, rains or droughts. When hurricanes lash the
island, not even the best machines can harvest the bent-over and
twisted canes. For centuries, the practice of burning sugarcane
was unknown and no soil was compacted under the weight of
complex machines and enormous trucks. Nitrogen, potassium and
phosphate fertilizers, today extremely expensive, did not yet
even exist, and the dry and wet months succeeded each other
regularly. In modern agriculture, no high yields are possible
without crop rotation methods.
On Sunday, April 1, the French Press Agency (AFP) published
disquieting reports on the subject of climate change, which
experts gathered by the United Nations already consider an
inevitable phenomenon that will spell serious repercussions for
the world in the coming decades.
According to a UN report to be approved next week in Brussels,
climate change will have a significant impact on the American
continent, generating more violent storms and heat waves and
causing droughts, the extinction of some species and even hunger
in Latin America.
The AFP report indicates that the Intergovernmental Panel on
Climate Change (IPCC) forewarned that at the end of this
century, every hemisphere will endure water-related problems
and, if governments take no measures in this connection, rising
temperatures could increase the risks of mortality,
contamination, natural catastrophes and infectious diseases.
In Latin America, global warming is already melting glaciers in
the Andes and threatening the Amazon forest, whose perimeter may
slowly be turned into a savannah, the cable goes on to report.
Because a great part of its population lives near the coast, the
United States is also vulnerable to extreme natural phenomena,
as hurricane Katrina demonstrated in 2005.
According to AFP, this is the second of three IPCC reports which
began to be published last February, following an initial
scientific forecast which established the certainty of climate
change.
This second 1400-page report which analyzes climate change in
different sectors and regions, of which AFP has obtained a copy,
considers that, even if radical measures to reduce carbon
dioxide emissions that pollute the atmosphere are taken, the
rise in temperatures around the planet in the coming decades is
already unavoidable, concludes the French Press Agency.
As was to be expected, at the Camp David meeting, Dan Fisk,
National Security advisor for the region, declared that "in the
discussion on regional issues, [I expect] Cuba to come up () if
there's anyone that knows how to create starvation, it's Fidel
Castro. He also knows how not to do ethanol".
As I find myself obliged to respond to this gentleman, it is my
duty to remind him that Cuba's infant mortality rate is lower
than the United States'. All citizens -- this is beyond question
-- enjoy free medical services. Everyone has access to education
and no one is denied employment, in spite of nearly half a
century of economic blockade and the attempts of US governments
to starve and economically asphyxiate the people of Cuba.
China would never devote a single ton of cereals or leguminous
plants to the production of ethanol, and it is an economically
prosperous nation which is breaking growth records, where all
citizens earn the income they need to purchase essential
consumer items, despite the fact that 48 percent of its
population, which exceeds 1.3 billion, works in agriculture. On
the contrary, it has set out to reduce energy consumption
considerably by shutting down thousands of factories which
consume unacceptable amounts of electricity and hydrocarbons. It
imports many of the food products mentioned above from far-off
corners of the world, transporting these over thousands of
miles.
Scores of countries do not produce hydrocarbons and are unable
to produce corn and other grains or oily seeds, for they do not
even have enough water to meet their most basic needs.
At a meeting on ethanol production held in Buenos Aires by the
Argentine Oil Industry Chamber and Cereals Exporters
Association, Loek Boonekamp, the Dutch head of the Organization
for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD)'s commercial and
marketing division, told the press that governments are very
much enthused about this process but that they should
objectively consider whether ethanol ought to be given such
resolute support.
According to Boonekamp, the United States is the only country
where ethanol can be profitable and, without subsidies, no other
country can make it viable.
According to the report, Boonekamp insists that ethanol is not
manna from Heaven and that we should not blindly commit to
developing this process.
Today, developed countries are pushing to have fossil fuels
mixed with biofuels at around five percent and this is already
affecting agricultural prices. If this figure went up to 10
percent, 30 percent of the United States' cultivated surface and
50 percent of Europe's would be required. That is the reason
Boonekamp asks himself whether the process is sustainable, as an
increase in the demand for crops destined to ethanol production
would generate higher and less stable prices.
Protectionist measures are today at 54 cents per gallon and real
subsidies reach far higher figures.
Applying the simple arithmetic we learned in high school, we
could show how, by simply replacing incandescent bulbs with
fluorescent ones, as I explained in my previous reflections,
millions and millions of dollars in investment and energy could
be saved, without the need to use a single acre of farming land.
In the meantime, we are receiving news from Washington, through
the AP, reporting that the mysterious disappearance of millions
of bees throughout the United States has edged beekeepers to the
brink of a nervous breakdown and is even cause for concern in
Congress, which will discuss this Thursday the critical
situation facing this insect, essential to the agricultural
sector. According to the report, the first disquieting signs of
this enigma became evident shortly after Christmas in the state
of Florida, when beekeepers discovered that their bees had
vanished without a trace. Since then, the syndrome which experts
have christened as Colony Collapse Disorder (CCD) has reduced
the country's swarms by 25 percent.
Daniel Weaver, president of the US Beekeepers Association,
stated that more than half a million colonies, each with a
population of nearly 50 thousand bees, had been lost. He added
that the syndrome has struck 30 of the country's 50 states. What
is curious about the phenomenon is that, in many cases, the
mortal remains of the bees are not found.
According to a study conducted by Cornell University, these
industrious insects pollinate crops valued at anywhere from 12
to 14 billion dollars.
Scientists are entertaining all kinds of hypotheses, including
the theory that a pesticide may have caused the bees'
neurological damage and altered their sense of orientation.
Others lay the blame on the drought and even mobile phone waves,
but, what's certain is that no one knows exactly what has
unleashed this syndrome.
The worst may be yet to come: a new war aimed at securing gas
and oil supplies that can take humanity to the brink of total
annihilation.
Invoking intelligence sources, Russian newspapers have reported
that a war on Iran has been in the works for over three years
now, since the day the government of the United States resolved
to occupy Iraq completely, unleashing a seemingly endless and
despicable civil war.
All the while, the government of the United States devotes
hundreds of billions to the development of highly sophisticated
technologies, as those which employ micro-electronic systems or
new nuclear weapons which can strike their targets an hour
following the order to attack.
The United States brazenly turns a deaf ear to world public
opinion, which is against all kinds of nuclear weapons.
Razing all of Iran's factories to the ground is a relatively
easy task, from the technical point of view, for a powerful
country like the United States. The difficult task may come
later, if a new war were to be unleashed against another Muslim
faith which deserves our utmost respect, as do all other
religions of the Near, Middle or Far East, predating or
postdating Christianity.
The arrest of English soldiers at Iran's territorial waters
recalls the nearly identical act of provocation of the so-called
"Brothers to the Rescue" who, ignoring President Clinton's
orders advanced over our country's territorial waters. Cuba's
absolutely legitimate and defensive action gave the United
States a pretext to promulgate the well-known Helms-Burton Act,
which encroaches upon the sovereignty of other nations besides
Cuba. The powerful media have consigned that episode to
oblivion. No few people attribute the price of oil, at nearly 70
dollars a gallon as of Monday, to fears of a possible invasion
of Iran.
Where shall poor Third World countries find the basic resources
needed to survive?
I am not exaggerating or using overblown language. I am
confining myself to the facts.
As can be seen, the polyhedron has many dark faces.
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