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Swan Song of the
Rich
The
Chilean oligarchs tore their cloths at the visit of
President Michelle Bachelet to
Cuba.
Alberto Van
Klaveren, the Chilean Under Secretary of Foreign Relations,
declared that in the February 12th Reflection, the ideas
emitted were strictly personal in nature.
That is very true since they don’t intend to be
anything else.
I welcomed
the Chilean head of state with all due respect.
I used not one word that might offend the
illustrious visitor. That would not have
had any common sense. I understood that
it was an elemental obligation even though it implied an
additional effort for me since it meant hours dedicated to
conversation and then to writing about the meeting.
I selected
several photos taken by a collaborator from the days when I
was head of state and I put them in her hands so that she
might decide what to do with them. I
made no use of them on my own account.
What is the
reason for such an oligarchic brouhaha in regards to the
meeting?
Why do they
state that my words constitute “a historical interpretation
on subjects that are far back in history”, as the ANSA
agency tells us?
I have
no commitment other than with the historical truth, and
history records that Simon Bolivar, the Liberator of
America, upon proclaiming
Bolivia’s
independence, designated a broad strip of the Pacific coast
of
South America
between the 22nd and 23rd parallels. It
also records that the
Atacama Desert
was included in the territory of the newly-born
Bolivia
when victory was won over the Spanish empire.
Guano,
nitrate, copper and other valuable minerals that were later
discovered were included in that territory.
I was rather moderate in my statement that it was not
known whether those minerals were Chilean or Bolivian; it
was a diplomatic way of expressing realities, thinking that
in the long run Bolivar was conceiving a United Latin
America, greater for its conception than for its wealth.
Be that as it
may, nobody can take away any of the brilliance or
importance from the historical moment that the approval or
rejection of the Venezuelan Constitutional Amendment will
signify the day after tomorrow.
As for
me, I shall always remain faithful to the historic people
who sacrificed so many lives starting on
September 11, 1973,
defending the immortal ideas of President Salvador Allende
and I will condemn the wily policies of Augusto Pinochet
until my last breath. Can the Chilean
oligarchy and the bureaucrats who are attempting to clean it
of all responsibility say as much?

Fidel Castro Ruz
February 13, 2009
6:17 p.m. |