Cuban youth explain how their country survives 鈥 despite US blockade

August 11, 2023
Issue 
Iv谩n Barreto Lopez (left) and Marianniz D铆az Hern谩ndez. Photo: Red Ant

Iv谩n Barreto Lopez from the Cuban Institute for Friendship with the Peoples聽and Marianniz D铆az Hern谩ndez from the Centre for Molecular Immunology in Havana spoke to students and staff at the University of Sydney on August 7.

Lopez and Hernandez have been speaking at meetings across Australia for a month. Both are members of the Cuban Young Communist League (UJC) which has more than 600,000 members.

The forum was organised by the Red Ant Collective in collaboration with several university clubs.

Nick Dobrijevich introduced Hern谩ndez, saying she had received the 2021 Annual Award from the Cuban Academy of Sciences and the 2022 Annual Health Award for Technological Research for her work on the Soberana Plus vaccine.

鈥淏ecause of the 60-year blockade, we don鈥檛 have enough money to buy international vaccines so we make our own,鈥 Hern谩ndez said. 鈥淭he blockade means we can鈥檛 buy anything from the United States or anything that has 10% of anything within it, from the US.

She said BioCubaFarma, a network of 34 Cuban biotech companies, employs 20,000 people and supplies 996 products including medicines, diagnostic tests, medical equipment, dental products, and raw materials for medical care.

鈥淲e produced three anti-COVID-19 vaccines, starting in March 2020, and by July 9, 2021, we had produced Abdala for adults, and in August 2021, Soberena 02 and Soberena Plus vaccines.鈥 Abdala references Cuban revolutionary hero .

鈥淲e produced the vaccines really fast because all the biotech companies, health care system, national regulation authorities and relevant departments in universities worked together.鈥

Hern谩ndez said Cuba has one of highest proportion of its population vaccinated in the world: 10 million people have had the vaccine and 8 million have had the booster.

鈥淪oberena had 92% efficacy and helped get our cases to a very low rate, even compared to Europe. We were the first country to vaccinate children over 2 years old.

鈥淲e sent the vaccines around the world, and doctors to countries in the Caribbean, Africa and Italy.鈥澛

Barreto Lopez said young people were 鈥渃ritical鈥 to the country鈥檚 pandemic response. 鈥淎s Cuba has free, universal health care, we were helping those in isolation, providing food and medicine, working within the biotech companies and transporting those who had disease [to hospitals].

He said while biotech companies around the world create a client base, it is 鈥渢otally different鈥 in Cuba. The biotech sector receives some economic benefit from sending its products around the world, but that 鈥渉elps us sustain our universal health system鈥.

鈥淔or every Cuban medicine is totally free, or less than 50 cents for any drugs, very minimal in cost.鈥 Cuba also sent the vaccines gratis to Syria, Mexico and Venezuela for free and made the technology free for some countries.

US blockade impacts everyone

Barreto Lopez said every single Cuban, and every generation, has experienced the negative effects of the US blockade.

鈥淪ince 1992, resolutions against the blockade have been presented in the United Nations and almost the entire world 鈥斅189 countries 鈥斅爃ave voted with Cuba.

鈥淚srael is the only nation to support the US. Even the US representative abstained one year but, after [Donald] Trump was elected, they voted against.鈥 He said under Jair Bolsonaro, Brazil abstained in 2021 and 2022. Ukraine abstained in both years, despite Cuba helping Ukraine after the Chernobyl disaster.

鈥淐uba has very limited economic life: third countries can鈥檛 trade normally. No bank in Australia can send money to us because they are related to US banks.

鈥淲e are on the list of terrorist countries. We have long lines to get food and fuel. [We have] blackouts of electrical power more than 4鈥6 hours long. All this is designed to make people tired and motivate people to overthrow the government. We鈥檝e had shortages of food, oil and raw materials. Every single generation has suffered from the US sanctions.鈥

The blockade prevents Cuba from receiving oxygen and syringe donations to help with COVID-19. Yet Cuba still sent medical brigades to help Nigeria, as well as Italy and Spain.

Cuba also still sends international literacy programs across the world: the program for Aboriginal communities聽is 鈥Yes We Can鈥 and in New Zealand, it聽is 鈥淕reen Light鈥.

Cuba didn鈥檛 have an anti-vaccine movement, Barreto Lopez said, even though it was not made mandatory. He said that even though the block of left-wing governments 鈥斅爐he Bolivarian Alliance for the Peoples of Our America and Community of Latin American and Caribbean States (CELAC) 鈥斅爃ad become weaker during the Donald Trump and Jair Bolsonaro years, the left is on the rise again.

鈥淲e have more cohesion in Latin America. CELAC developed a very strong nuclear disarmament position. But we need to rebuild relations as a block.鈥

He said there are 鈥渘ew opportunities for collaboration鈥 against US hegemony with the BRICS grouping of Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa.

Asked about young people鈥檚 attitudes to Cuban socialism, Barreto Lopez said there are some who look for alternatives, influenced by the 鈥渁nti-Cuban, US-based former Cuba mafia鈥 and the West鈥檚 corporate media promotion of capitalism.

He said 鈥渁 core of young people鈥 still support the revolution and are active in 鈥渞esisting imperialism and back the global socialist movement鈥.

Cuba had learned from mistakes in relation to the LGBTIQ community, women and the rights of the Black Cubans. Some of the discrimination is more related to 鈥渃ulture鈥 rather than it being 鈥渋nstitutional鈥. This, he said, is connected to Cuba being colonised by the transphobic, homophobic, masochistic Spanish for centuries.

Change聽an ongoing struggle

鈥淭his cultural, educational change is an ongoing struggle,鈥 Barreto Lopez said. Cuba was still ahead of the World Health Organisation, which only removed homosexuality from its International Classification of Diseases list in 1990.

鈥淚n the 1980s, Cuba had offices for LGBTIQ rights and, last year, we approved the Family Code. It contains women鈥檚 rights, children rights, elderly people鈥檚 rights and promotes inclusivity.

鈥淲e are working hard to make people happy and determine everyone鈥檚 rights, despite the economic blockade.鈥

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