This is the last article you can read this month
You can read more article this month
You can read more articles this month
Sorry your limit is up for this month
Reset on:
Please help support the Morning Star by subscribing here
WHILE heads of state at the Summit of the Americas in Panama prepared to give their major speeches, there was a lot of action on the sidelines at parallel meetings and at the Summit of the Peoples.
At the “civil society” meeting there was sharp conflict. First numerous delegates — who had been given preliminary clearance to attend by the Panamanian organisers — were not given credentials to actually participate.
The Cuban Federation of Labour (CTC) and Puerto Rican organisation the Hostiano National Independence Movement were both denied such credentials.
On the other hand, a gaggle of opponents of the left-wing governments of Cuba, Venezuela and other countries suddenly appeared as representatives of those countries’ “civil societies.”
The news soon spread among the delegations that these included people whose oppositional activities at home had been financed by the US government through the Agency for International Development, the National Endowment for Democracy and other agencies.
Particularly annoying was the presence of several Cuban dissidents based in the US, some of whom have hobnobbed politically and socially with violent extreme right-wing elements in the Cuban exile community in the United States.
The story got around that Felix Rodriguez Mendigutia had arrived in Panama.
Rodriguez Mendigutia is a veteran of the disastrous Bay of Pigs invasion of Cuba in April 1961, and a long-time CIA agent.
To Cubans and other Latin Americans his chief claim to fame is ordering the killing of the Cuban-Argentine guerilla leader Ernesto “Che” Guevara in Bolivia on October 9 1967.
Che, while heading a small group of Bolivian and Cuban fighters against the dictatorship of US-sponsored President Rene Barrientos, had been wounded and captured. Although Rodriguez Mendigutia did not kill Che himself, he transmitted orders from the Barrientos regime to have him killed. After Che was killed, Rodriguez Mendigutia fired some shots into his dead body and stole his watch.
General Barrientos and his colleagues did not wish to put Che on trial, because it would have given him a platform to project his political ideas.
After the killing of Che, Rodriguez Mendigutia went on to participate in Operation Phoenix during the Vietnam War, in which tens of thousands of Vietnamese civilians suspected of sympathising with the Viet Cong were tortured and murdered.
Later he was involved in the bloody Contra wars in Central America.
Angered by the denial of credentials to the Cuban trade unionists, and by the honouring of the “mercenaries,” all the Cuban and Venezuelan delegates walked out of the civil society activity.
When some of the Cuban dissidents tried to lay a wreath on the monument to Cuban independence hero Jose Marti in front of the Cuban embassy in the Panamanian capital, supporters of the present Cuban government protested and there was a scuffle, evidently without injuries.
The parallel Summit of the Peoples, Unions, and Social Movements went more smoothly. The more than 3,500 delegates representing hundreds of labour unions and peasant, indigenous, women’s, student, youth and other organisations, produced a final declaration on April 11.
It reflects the progressive nature of the people’s movement for change in Latin America and the Caribbean.
Approved resolutions included:
- Declaring Latin America to be a zone of peace, and free of colonialism.
- Rejection of military intervention and harassment by the US and its allies against the nations of the hemisphere, and the removal of all US military bases, which have grown in number from 21 to 79 in the last four years.
- A salute to the Cuban revolution and to the newly achieved freedom of the Cuban Five and demanding an end to the US economic blockade of Cuba — as well as the closing of the US base at Guantanamo, Cuba.
- Rejection of US harassment of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela and a demand for the withdrawal of President Obama’s executive order which characterised Venezuela as a threat to the United States.
- Reaffirmation that Puerto Rico is a Latin American and Caribbean nation with full rights to sovereignty which are currently violated by the colonial tutelage of the US.
- Expression of full support to Argentina in its efforts to reclaim the Malvinas (Falklands) islands as national territory, and for Bolivia’s claim to a means of access to the Pacific Ocean.
- Support for the building of a new society based on human solidarity, which respects the rights and participation of women, youth and all other sectors.
- Defence of the area’s natural resources, biodiversity, food sovereignty, mother Earth and the rights of the indigenous peoples and afro-descendents, and for the right to struggle for jobs, unionisation and economic wellbeing.
- Opposition to neoliberal trade pacts such as the Free Trade Area of the Americas and new forms of the same thing which are being developed. Rejection of the external debt which is illegitimate and immoral.
- Supporting the processes of regional integration such as Alba (Bolivarian Alliance for the Peoples of Our America) and Celac (Community of Latin American and Caribbean States).
- A version of this article first appeared on the news site www.peoplesworld.org.