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The attack on Ecuador
Underestimating Rafael Correa
By Fidel Castro Ruz
03/03/08 - --- -
I remember when he visited us, months before the electoral
campaign when he was thinking of running as a candidate for the
Presidency of Ecuador. He had been the Minister of the Economy
in the government of Alfredo Palacio, a surgeon with
professional prestige who had also visited us as Vice President,
before becoming the President in an unexpected situation that
took place in Ecuador. He had been receptive to a program of
ophthalmologic operations that we offered him as a form of
cooperation. There were good relations between our two
governments.
A while earlier Correa had resigned from the Ministry of the
Economy. He was unhappy with what he called administrative
corruption instigated by Oxy, a foreign company that explored
and invested important sums of money, but was holding on to four
out of every five barrels of oil that it extracted. He didnīt
talk about nationalization, but about taxing them heavily; these
taxes would be assigned in advance to specific social
investments. He had already approved the measures and a judge
had declared them to be valid.
Since the word "nationalize" had not been mentioned, I thought
he felt apprehensive about the concept. It didnīt surprise me
because he had graduated as an economist with much acclaim from
a well-known U.S. university. I didnīt bother getting into much
depth; I bombarded him with questions from the arsenal
accumulated in the struggle against the Latin American foreign
debt in 1985 and of Cubaīs own experience.
There are high-risk investments that use sophisticated
technology and that no small nation like Cuba or Ecuador could
take on.
Since this was already in 2006 and we were determined to promote
the energy revolution, --ours was the first country on the
planet to proclaim this as a vital issue for humankind-- I had
dealt with the subject particularly emphatically. But I halted,
as I understood one of his reasons.
I related to him the conversation I had had a while ago with the
president of REPSOL, a Spanish company. This company, associated
with other international companies, would undertake an expensive
operation to drill the ocean floor, more than 2000 meters down,
using sophisticated technology, in Cubaīs jurisdictional waters.
I asked the head of the Spanish company: How much is an
exploratory well worth? I ask you this because we would like to
participate, even if it is for one percent of the total cost and
we would like to know what you want to do with our oil.
Correa, for his part, had told me that for every one hundred
dollars taken out by the companies, only twenty remained in the
country; it didnīt even get into the budget, he said; it was
left in a separate fund for just about anything other than
improving the living conditions of the people.
I abolished the fund, he told me, and directed 40 percent
towards education and health, technological and highway
development, and the rest towards buying back the debt if the
price was favorable, and if not, investing it in something more
useful. Before, every year we had to buy a portion of that debt
which was becoming more expensive.
In the case of Ecuador, he added, oil policies verged on treason
against the country. Why do they do it? I asked him. Is it
because they are afraid of the Yankees or due to unbearable
pressure? He answered: If they have a Minister of the Economy
who tells them privatization would improve efficiency, you can
just imagine. I didnīt do that.
I encourage him to go on and he calmly explains. The foreign
company Oxy is one that has broken its contract and according to
Ecuadorian law it requires an expiration date. It means that the
oil field operated by this company must go over to the State,
but because of Yankee pressure the government does not dare to
occupy it; a situation is created which is not contemplated by
the legislation. The law just states that an expiration date
must be set, and nothing more. The judge at the court of first
instance at that moment was the president of PETROECUADOR and he
made it happen. I was a member of PETROECUADOR and they called
an emergency meeting to expel him from his position. I didnīt
attend and they couldnīt fire him. The judge declared the
expiration date.
What did the Yankees want? I asked him. They wanted a fine, he
quickly replied. Listening to him I realized that I had
underestimated him.
I was in a hurry because of a great number of commitments. I
invited him to sit in on a meeting with a large group of highly
qualified Cuban professionals who were leaving for Bolivia to be
part of the Medical Brigade; it had staff for more than 30
hospitals including 19 surgical positions that could do more
than 130 thousand ophthalmologic operations per year; all in the
manner of free cooperation. Ecuador possesses three similar
centers with six ophthalmologic positions.
Dinner with the Ecuadorian economist took place into the morning
hours of February 9, 2006. There were scarcely any view points
that I didnīt cover. I even spoke to him about the very harmful
mercury that modern industry scatters throughout the planetīs
oceans. Consumerism was of course a subject that I emphasized;
the high cost of the kilowatt/hour in the thermoelectric plants;
the differences between socialist and communist forms of
distribution, the role of money, the trillions spent on
advertising which people had no choice but to pay for in the
prices of goods, and the studies made by university social
brigades who discovered, among the 500 thousand families in the
capital, the number of elderly folk lived alone. I explained the
stage of university courses for all that we were involved in.
We became friends even though he perhaps received the impression
that I was self-sufficient. If that happened, it was truly not
my intention.
Since that time I have observed his every step: the electoral
process, focusing on the concrete problems of Ecuadorians and
the peopleīs victory over the oligarchy.
In the history of our peoples there are many things that bring
us together. Sucre was always a highly admired figure, along
with The Liberator Bolivar; as Marti said, what he hasnīt done
in America remains to be done, and as Neruda exclaimed, Bolivar
awakens every hundred years.
Imperialism has just committed a monstrous crime in Ecuador.
Deadly bombs were dropped in the early morning hours on a group
of men and women who, almost without exception, were asleep.
That has been deduced by all the official reports right from the
beginning. Any concrete accusations against that group of human
beings do not justify that action. They were Yankee bombs,
guided by Yankee satellites.
Absolutely no one has the right to kill in cold blood. If we
accept that imperial method of warfare and barbarism, Yankee
bombs directed by satellites could fall on any group of Latin
American men and women, in the territory of any country, war or
no war. The fact that this happened on undisputed Ecuadorian
territory is an aggravating circumstance.
We are not an enemy of Colombia. Previous reflections and
exchanges demonstrate how much of an effort we have made, both
the current President of the Council of State of Cuba and I, to
abide by a declared policy of principles and peace, proclaimed
years ago in our relations with the rest of the Latin American
states.
Today, with everything at risk, we have not been transformed
into belligerent people. We are determined supporters of that
unity among peoples which Marti named Our America.
If we keep quiet we shall become accomplices. Today they would
like to have our friend, the economist and President of Ecuador
Rafael Correa, seated in the dock; this is something we couldnīt
even conceive that morning of February 9, 2006. At that time it
seemed that my imagination was capable of embracing all kinds of
dreams and risks, but never anything like what has occurred in
the early morning of Saturday March 1, 2008.
Correa has in his hands the few survivors and the rest of the
bodies. The two which are missing prove that Ecuadorian
territory was occupied by troops that crossed the border. Now he
can cry out like Emile Zola: Jīaccuse!
Fidel Castro Ruz, March 3, 2008, 8:36 p.m.
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