From: Franklin Wayne Poley 
Subject: SNET: Genocide Against Serbia Says Castro.
Date: 9 May 1999 13:58:12 -0400
To: yugoslavia-discuss@onelist.com


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---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Sun, 9 May 1999 11:01:04 -0400
From: Charles Brown 
Reply-To: Forum on Labor in the Global Economy 
To: LABOR-L@YORKU.CA
Subject: Fidel Castro on war on Yugoslavia

Subject: FIDEL' S DECLARATION ON YUGOSLAVIA

Date: Fri, 7 May 1999
A forward.

Charles Brown

(((((((((((((((((((((((

EXCERPTS FROM THE SPEECH MADE BY COMRADE FIDEL CASTRO AT A MASS RALLY IN
THE UNIVERSITY OF HAVANA ON MAY 4, 1999, RELATED TO THE WAR IN YUGOSLAVIA.
(after some remarks to the Cuban baseball team)

There is another more important conflict. Presently, brutal and destructive
air strikes are taking place in the very heart of Europe, which are causing
 devastation, death and terror in a population of millions. Religious and
ethnic conflicts have been considerably aggravated and thus hundreds of
thousands of men, women and children, also horrified by the bombs and the
war, are massively migrating.

On the eve of the next millenium Europe, --that is, NATO and its members,
the United States of America included-- is involved in what can be
described, whether they like it or not, as genocide. That is what results
from depriving one million people from electricity and heating services,
overnight and in mid winter. Also from cutting off all communications,
sources of energy and transportation; destroying non-military facilities
providing crucial services to all the population and tearing to pieces all
the means of life created by a nation. Such destructive frenzy, either by
mistake or recklessness, is directly killing or injuring thousands of
civilians while trying to submit them by the destruction of their mass
media and the intensification of the psychological warfare with
overpowering technology and bombs. Unquestionably, this is a major genocide.

Europe is involved in a conflict hazardous to itself and the world. An
extremely serious precedent is being set in defiance of international law
and the United Nations Organization, and resulting in an increasingly
complicated the situation.

We are of the view that in such a predicament only a political, and not a
military, solution is possible based on respect for the rights of every
nation in that region, and every religion, ethnic group and culture: a
solution for both, Serbians and Kosovars. I am deeply convinced that the
problem cannot be solved by force, that the military technology will crash
against the will of any people determined to fight. I firmly believe that
when the people are willing to fight --and this is how I feel about our own
people, too-- no power, regardless of its might, can throw them down on
their knees.

In the case of Serbia, the aggressor thought it would be a simple walk, a
three days adventure, that the Serbians would surrender to the first bombs.
Forty days have already passed and thousands and thousands of bombs have
been dropped, however, we do not perceive any symptom of weakness in their
will to fight. This we know by keeping in touch, through cell phones, --the
only means of communication-- with three Cuban diplomats in  Belgrade who
relate to us what is happening there every day and after every night of
Dantesque bombing.

We are told by those diplomats about the extraordinary morale of the
Serbian people, in general, and particularly the people in Belgrade where
planes are constantly flying at low altitude, thundering in the sky,
terrorizing and causing traumas in children --hundreds of thousands,
millions of children and adolescents afflicted perhaps for life-- youth,
women and elders affected by the noise of the explosions and the constant
attacks, whose growing viciousness is also announced. Once again I insist
that that path will not lead to the solution of the problem. I firmly
believe that there is no other choice, for anybody, but to work toward a
political solution which is possible on the basis of common sense and
rationality.

>From the beginning of the attacks we realized that they would be useless
and would only bring about a catastrophe.

We are aware of the history of World War II, the nazi invasion of
Yugoslavia and that people's long resistance. This time the aggressors do
not even want to use ground forces since they believe that their smart
bombs and guided missiles can solve the problem. But, the problem cannot be
resolved with missiles, bombs or ground troops because when the people are
determined to fight they do so everywhere, from all directions, and every
house may become a fortress, every man or woman a combatant. It is not a
matter of armored divisions, artillery groups, air or navy war fleets.

We know very well how we would conduct a struggle in our country under
similar conditions and so do millions of people here; all those methods
would be useless. This country cannot be conquered by anyone; no one can
conquer a country that is willing to fight. It is wrong to try to conquer
it. It already happened in Vietnam where the Americans understood it only
when they had lost over 50 thousand lives and killed 4 million Vietnamese.
Well, now, they are in a similar situation there, and one that can become
more complicated if the Serbians everywhere give their support to the
Serbians inside Serbia. Then, the political situation in Russia would
become untenable because the ethnic bonds between both peoples are very
strong.

Other peoples will draw their own conclusions. I think the Russians are
drawing theirs --after all that has happened to them in the past and all
that can still happen to them in the future-- when they see the numberless
bombs dropped by a military alliance driven increasingly arrogant, haughty
and furious by an unexpected resistance. Europe and NATO have become the
hostages of a subjective factor: the decision the Serbians might adopt --or
 not-- to resist to the end, although it is to be assumed that after such
destruction they are not going to be much inclined to give up. What is
happening there was obvious to us from the beginning. This does not mean
that we are against anybody's rights; we support both, the rights of the
Serbians and the Kosovars' rights.

When we were recently informed that Guantanamo Naval Base would be used to
accommodate 20 thousand Kosovar refugees, we immediately agreed, and I
think it is the first time that we have agreed with anything the United
States of America has done in that base. It is not that they requested our
permission or agreement, actually they simply were kind enough to
communicate to us that they would do that. They explained their purposes,
they said it would be for a limited period of time while the conflict was
settled, and so on. The least they expected --they do not know this
country-- was our reply.

We said that we did not only agree that 20 thousand Kosovar refugees were
sheltered there but also that we were willing to cooperate as much as
possible in providing care for those refugees, that we offered our hospital
services if required, our doctors and any other cooperation within our
capabilities.

Finally, they were not sent in and it was a clever thing to rectify that
decision because they would have been much criticized. The truth is that
none of the NATO countries, which have dropped so many bombs there, really
want to receive refugees. There is much xenophobia and selfishness in the
West. They had said they would receive from 80 thousand to a 100 thousand
but they have only received a few thousands because they do not want to
have Kosovar refugees in their own territories, so they have done nothing
significant. Anyway, it was a political mistake but we were informed and we
said that we agreed.

There is something else. There is this international humanitarian
organization known as the Saint Egidious Community which cares for
refugees; it sustains relations with the Catholic Church and works mostly
in supportive actions every time there are refugee problems.

Although we strongly condemn the brutal and genocidal attacks against the
Serbian people, we also share in the suffering of the hundreds of thousands
of refugees dragged to such condition by a series of longstanding factors,
not only historic in nature but also associated to the disintegration of
Yugoslavia, a country that had lived in peace for 40 years after World War II.

Those who disintegrated Yugoslavia and stirred up the national ethnic and
religious conflicts are greatly responsible for what is happening there
now. Many of Europe's statesmen and public figures are aware of Europe's
responsibility in that process. Those who so lightly agreed to use all
their sophisticated and overwhelming military technology against what was
left of the former Yugoslavia bear a great responsibility for what is going
on there and the misery of those hundreds of thousands of refugees.

As for solutions, we advocate solutions for all the parties involved:
refugees, citizens of Kosovo, Serbians and people of other nationalities
living there, and all the nations that make up what is left of Yugoslavia
today. That is, from the humane point of view our sympathies are with all
the suffering people there. In this token, when several weeks ago, in the
first days of April, we were visited by leaders of the Saint Egidious
Community and they explained to us what they were doing to provide care and
assistance to those distressed refugees, for which purpose they had about
30 medical doctors, --this happened a few weeks ago but I have not
mentioned it before, I am doing it for the first time-- we said to them:
Look, we do not have abundant resources but we have a human asset. If you
needed medical personnel to care for those hundreds of thousands of
refugees living in deprived camps, our country would be willing to
contribute with one thousand physicians, absolutely free of charge, to care
for the Kosovar refugees. (APPLAUSE)

Based on a longstanding experience we know that language is not a barrier.
A six months old baby speaks no language at all, however, he/she can be
cared for by a doctor. This offer we made to the leaders of the Saint
Egidious Community on the night of April 5, that is, 12 days after the
onset of the NATO attacks."

___________________________________________________

NUEVO AMANECER PRESS-N.A.P.To know about us visit:
http://www.nap.cuhm.mx/nap0.htm  (spanish)


Louis Proyect
(http://www.panix.com/~lnp3/marxism.html)


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