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   soc.culture.germany      More than just Kraftwerk and Hasselhoff      611 messages   

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   Message 256 of 611   
   pedro martori to All   
   Castro's Medical Missionaries Blanket Ho   
   07 Mar 05 11:32:22   
   
   XPost: alt.politics.europe, alt.politics.org.fbi, alt.politics.republican   
   XPost: alt.politics.usa, miami.general, soc.culture.canada   
   XPost: soc.culture.europe, soc.culture.quebec, soc.culture.usa   
   From: pedro1940@progression.net   
      
   Castro's Medical Missionaries Blanket Honduras   
      
   By MARY ANASTASIA O'GRADY   
   February 18, 2005; Page A11   
      
   TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras -- Maybe Fidel Castro, mastermind behind four and a   
   half decades of preposterous Cuban economics, really does understand the   
   market after all. That would explain how the Cuban dictator has managed to   
   maintain some 350 Cuban doctors in this country since 1998, despite   
   President Ricardo Maduro's disapproval of Cuba's human rights record.   
      
   The Cuban doctors seem to have already had the effect of polishing Cuba's   
   image as a kinder, gentler dictatorship, and making it more politically   
   costly for Mr. Maduro to support Cuba's dissident movement. More troubling   
   is the potential for soft indoctrination, a kind of tilling the soil in the   
   poor countryside so that it is ready when political opportunity presents   
   itself as it has in Venezuela of late.   
      
   The Cuban doctor program was introduced into Honduras when Hurricane Mitch   
   devastated the country in November 1998. With over 50% of the Honduran   
   population living in rural areas and 1.5 million Hondurans with no access to   
   health care, according to a national health official, there was a market for   
   Fidel's foot soldiers of medicine even before the ravages of the hurricane.   
      
   But the storm brought about a sense of urgency and then-President Carlos   
   Flores signed a bilateral agreement to let in the doctors.   
      
   A little later, after Venezuelan President Hugo Chávez took office in 1999,   
   Castro began a similar effort in that country and today, reportedly 14,000   
   doctors, 3,000 dentists and 1,500 eye-care specialists can be found in poor   
   Venezuelan barrios. There are reports of Venezuelan doctors denouncing the   
   competence of these Cuban imports but for the poor who have little access to   
   health care, the quality of the medical service may be less important than   
   the fact that a doctor has appeared to hold a dying hand.   
      
   By serving the most vulnerable, the Cuban doctors in Venezuela are said to   
   have earned a certain tolerance among the poor for the increased Cuban   
   presence in the country and for Cuba's growing role in Venezuelan domestic   
   affairs.   
      
   So why stop with Venezuela? The "Revolution," after all, promises "socialism   
   or death" to all the world. Now Fidel's medicos have fanned out all over the   
   region wherever a dearth of doctors makes them welcome.   
      
   Honduras is one such market. Its annual per capita gross domestic product of   
   $711 in 2002 puts it among the poorest countries in Latin America. Yet in   
   the mid-1990s the Honduran congress set the minimum wage for public-sector   
   general practitioners at an unmanageable $1,500 per month. Specialists earn   
   almost $2,500 per month. In the late 1990s, those doctors' salaries were   
   indexed to the minimum wage, putting further upward pressure on the price   
   the government had to pay a physician in its national health system. Most   
   only work six hours per day because they also practice medicine in the   
   private sector.   
      
   By pricing services too high, doctors delivered a double whammy to Honduras.   
   Limits to the government's health-care payroll meant that fewer doctors   
   could be hired and more Hondurans had to go without care. One high-ranking   
   official here estimates about half of able Honduran doctors are unemployed.   
      
   Enter Cuba with its oversupply of medics, its desperation for hard currency   
   and its expansionist political agenda. What better way to fill the Honduran   
   void for medical care than with low-priced Cuban physicians? The bilateral   
   agreement signed around the time of the hurricane opened the door and set a   
   monthly salary of $300. The doctors have even more value-added because they   
   are willing to work in rural areas where Honduran doctors refuse to go.   
      
   Cuba also recognized another market opportunity: training new doctors at   
   rock bottom prices. As part of the same agreement, some 600 Hondurans are   
   now in Cuba studying medicine. The Honduran government pays Cuba $300 to   
   $400 per year, per student. This year the first crop of graduates is set to   
   return home.   
      
   A health official here notes that some Honduran specialists who have worked   
   with Cuban specialists have complained that the Cubans are not up to par and   
   that they lack specific training that is required in Honduras.   
   Interestingly, the arriving Cubans do not have to take certification exams   
   to ensure that they meet Honduran standards. Nevertheless, the same health   
   official told me that the populations where they work providing basic   
   services seem pleased with their presence and performance.   
      
   Fidel has already earned a handsome return on his "goodwill." The proof   
   surfaced when Mr. Maduro sponsored a resolution in the U.N. Human Rights   
   Commission in 2004 calling on Cuba to open its doors to human rights   
   monitors.   
      
   Cuba's harsh treatment of its peaceful dissidents, including solitary   
   confinement in horrific punishment cells, suggests that the Maduro move was   
   a routine expression of solidarity with the oppressed by a civilized people.   
   But it turned out to be an enormous act of political courage by Mr. Maduro,   
   who faced a firestorm of opposition for it. As one official here told me,   
   the work that the Cuban doctors have done here "played a big role" in the   
   outcry against the president.   
      
   Respectability at the UNHRC, more favorable treatment from the Organization   
   of American States, spreading the revolutionary dream, these are all   
   objectives of the doctors program. So the good the doctors do for the poor   
   must be balanced against those objectives of a tyrannical regime.   
      
   Now see it the way Hondurans might. In a bifurcating Latin America, where a   
   good number of states are giving in to populist demagoguery, Mr. Maduro has   
   spent a lot of political capital to repel atavistic tendencies. He has   
   cracked down on kidnapping rings, deregulated the telecom industry,   
   introduced an important property-titling reform and entered into the Central   
   American Free Trade Agreement.   
      
   But Honduras is paying a punishing price for helping the U.S. fight its war   
   on drugs. The U.S. is asking the government to face violence and organized   
   crime, the corruption of fragile institutions and the use of its minimal   
   resources to engage in an absurd struggle with filthy rich   
   narco-traffickers. Meanwhile, the kindly Fidel is offering low-priced   
   medical care. U.S. policy makers take note.   
      
      
   lavozdecubalibre.com   
   lavozdecubalibre.com   
      
   --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05   
    * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)   

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