-------------------------
Via Workers World News Service
Reprinted from the Sept. 13, 2001
issue of Workers World newspaper
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FIDEL CASTRO TO RACISM CONFERENCE: "WE ARE ON THE 
VERGE OF A HUGE GLOBAL CRISIS"

Excerpts from the key address by Dr. Fidel Castro Ruz, president 
of the Republic of Cuba, at the World Conference against Racism, 
Racial
Discrimination, Xenophobia and Related Intolerance, Durban,
South Africa, Sept. 1

Excellencies:

Delegates and guests:

Racism, racial discrimination and xenophobia are not 
naturally instinctive reactions of human beings but rather a 
social, cultural and political phenomenon born directly of 
wars, military conquests, slavery and the individual or 
collective exploitation of the weakest by the most powerful 
all through the history of human societies.

No one has the right to boycott this conference, which tries 
to bring some sort of relief to the overwhelming majority of 
humankind afflicted by unbearable suffering and enormous 
injustice. Neither has anyone the right to set preconditions 
to this conference or urge it to avoid the discussion of 
historical responsibility, fair compensation or the way we 
decide to rate the dreadful genocide perpetrated, at this 
very moment, against our Palestinian brothers by extreme 
right leaders who, in alliance with the hegemonic 
superpower, pretend to be acting on behalf of another people 
which throughout almost 2,000 years was the victim of the 
most fierce persecution, discrimination and injustice that 
history has known.

Cuba speaks of reparations, and supports this idea as an 
unavoidable moral duty to the victims of racism, based on a 
major precedent, that is, the indemnification being paid to 
the descendants of the Hebrew people who in the very heart 
of Europe suffered the brutal and loathsome racist 
holocaust. However, it is not with the intent to undertake 
an impossible search for the direct descendants or the 
specific countries of the victims of actions occurred 
throughout centuries. The irrefutable truth is that tens of 
millions of Africans were captured, sold like a commodity 
and sent beyond the Atlantic to work in slavery while 70 
million Indigenous people in that hemisphere perished as a 
result of the European conquest and colonization.

The inhuman exploitation imposed on the peoples of three 
continents, including Asia, marked forever the destiny and 
lives of over 4.5 billion people living in the Third World 
today whose poverty, unemployment, illiteracy and health 
rates as well as their infant mortality, life expectancy and 
other calamities--too many, in fact, to enumerate here--are 
certainly awesome and harrowing. They are the current 
victims of that atrocity which lasted centuries and the ones 
who clearly deserve compensation for the horrendous crimes 
perpetrated against their ancestors and peoples.

Actually, such a brutal exploitation did not end when many 
countries became independent, not even after the formal 
abolition of slavery. Right after independence, the main 
ideologists of the American Union that emerged when the 13 
colonies got rid of the British domination at the end of the 
18th century, advanced ideas and strategies unquestionably 
expansionist in nature.

It was based on such ideas that the ancient white settlers 
of European descent, in their march to the West, forcibly 
occupied the lands in which Native Americans had lived for 
thousands of years, thus exterminating millions of them in 
the process. But they did not stop at the boundaries of the 
former Spanish possessions; consequently Mexico, a Latin 
American country that had attained its independence in 1821, 
was stripped of millions of square kilometers of territory 
and invaluable natural resources.

Meanwhile, in the increasingly powerful and expansionist 
nation born in North America, the obnoxious and inhumane 
slavery system stayed in place for almost a century after 
the famous Declaration of Independence of 1776 was issued, 
the same that proclaimed that all men were born free and 
equal.

After the purely formal slave emancipation, African 
Americans were subjected during one hundred more years to 
the harshest racial discrimination, and many of its features 
and consequences still persist after almost four more 
decades of heroic struggles and the achievements of the 
1960s, for which Martin Luther King Jr., Malcolm X and other 
outstanding fighters gave their lives. Based on a purely 
racist rationale, the longest and most severe legal 
sentences are passed against African Americans who in the 
wealthy American society are bound to live in dire poverty 
and with the lowest living standards.

Likewise, what is left of the Native American peoples, who 
were the first to inhabit a large portion of the current 
territory of the United States of America, remain under even 
worse conditions of discrimination and neglect.

Needless to mention the data on the social and economic 
situation of Africa, where entire countries and even whole 
regions of sub-Saharan Africa are in risk of extinction, the 
result of an extremely complex combination of economic 
backwardness, excruciating poverty and grave diseases, both 
old and new, that have become a true scourge. And the 
situation is no less dramatic in numerous Asian countries. 
On top of all this, there are the huge and unpayable debts, 
the disparate terms of trade, the ruinous prices of basic 
commodities, the demographic explosion, the neoliberal 
globalization and the climate changes that produce long 
droughts alternating with increasingly intensive rains and 
floods. It can be mathematically proven that such a 
predicament is unsustainable. ...

There are enough funds to save the world from tragedy.

May the arms race and the weapons commerce that only bring 
devastation and death truly end.

Let be used for development a good part of the one trillion 
U.S. dollars annually spent on commercial advertising that 
creates false illusions and inaccessible consumer habits 
while releasing the venom that destroys national cultures 
and identities.

May the modest 0.7 percentage point of the Gross National 
Product promised as official development assistance be 
finally delivered.

May the tax suggested by Nobel Prize Laureate James Tobin be 
imposed in a reasonable and effective way on the current 
speculative operations accounting for trillions of U.S. 
dollars every 24 hours; then the United Nations, which 
cannot go on depending on meager, inadequate, and belated 
donations and charities, will have one trillion U.S. dollars 
annually to save and develop the world. Given the 
seriousness and urgency of the existing problems, which have 
become a real hazard for the very survival of our species on 
the planet, that is what would actually be needed before it 
is too late.

Put an end to the ongoing genocide against the Palestinian 
people that is taking place while the world stares in 
amazement. May the basic right to life of that people, 
children and youth, be protected. May their right to peace 
and independence be respected; then, there will be nothing 
to fear from UN documents.

I am aware that the need for some relief from the awful 
situation their countries are facing has led many friends 
from Africa and other regions to suggest the need for such 
prudence as would allow something to come out of this 
conference. I sympathize with them but I cannot renounce my 
convictions, as I feel that the more candid we are in 
telling the truth the more possibilities there will be to be 
heeded and respected. There have been enough centuries of 
deception.

I have only three other short questions based on realities 
that cannot be ignored.

The capitalist, developed and wealthy countries today 
participate in the imperialist system born of capitalism 
itself and the economic order imposed on the world based on 
the philosophy of selfishness and the brutal competition 
between people, nations and groups of nations which is 
completely indifferent to any feelings of solidarity and 
honest international cooperation. They live under the 
misleading, irresponsible and hallucinating atmosphere of 
consumer societies. Thus, regardless of the sincerity of 
their blind faith in such a system and the convictions of 
their most serious statesmen, I wonder: Will they be able to 
understand the grave problems of today's world, which in its 
incoherent and uneven development is ruled by blind laws, by 
the huge power and the interests of the ever growing and 
increasingly uncontrollable and independent transnational 
corporations?

Will they come to understand the impending universal chaos 
and rebellion? And, even if they wanted to, could they put 
an end to racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and 
other related issues, which are precisely the rest of them 
all?

>From my viewpoint we are on the verge of a huge economic, 
social and political global crisis. Let's try to build an 
awareness about these realities and the alternatives will 
come up. History has shown that it is only from deep crisis 
that great solutions have emerged. The peoples' right to 
life and justice will definitely impose itself under a 
thousand different shapes.

I believe in the mobilization and the struggle of the 
peoples! I believe in the idea of justice! I believe in 
truth! I believe in humanity!

Thank you.

- END -

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