from: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
subject: Fidel's speech at IberoAmerican summit
Date: Thu, 23 Nov 2000

REMARKS BY DR.FIDEL CASTRO RUZ, PRESIDENT OF THE REPUBLIC OF CUBA, AT
THE 10TH IBERO-AMERICAN SUMMIT. PANAMA CITY, 17-18 NOVEMBER, 2000.

Her Excellency Mrs. Mireya Moscoso;
Your Majesty;
Excellencies;
Distinguished guests:

It was a happy initiative to adopt "United for childhood and
adolescence, the basis of justice and equity in the new millenium",
as the central issue of this summit conference. That idea alone would
suffice to give meaning to this significant gathering. Thus, I wish
to congratulate Mrs. Mireya Moscoso, President of the host country.

The situation of children is different in every one of our nations.
Despite progress made in the last  two decades, partly due to the
relevant initiatives promoted and the tenacious efforts undertaken by
UNICEF, the WHO and other UN agencies --more or less warmly received
and supported by the national governments, taking into account the
disparities in development and resources among nations-- life for
Latin American children in general is really dramatic.

The 45% of the total population in Latin America and the Caribbean
region are poor, that is, 224 million people, and 90 million of them
live in absolute poverty. Actually, over half of the poor and
absolute poor are children and adolescents. As indicated by the UN
Children Fund: "Children are more severely affected by poverty. No
other age group is as vulnerable since the physical and psychological
damages they sustain affect them for life".

  According to data from the Pan American Health Organization, acute
respiratory infections, diarrhea and nutritional deficiency persist
as the three main causes of death for children under 5 years of
age. The average mortality rate for children under 5 years of age in
Latin America and the Caribbean region was 39 per 1000 live births in
1998, thus, the number of dead children was close to half a
million. Acute respiratory infections, such as influenza and
pneumonia, are the cause of one third of all deaths among children
under 5 in the region; close to 60% of pediatric consultations are
related to them and most of the resulting deaths can be prevented by
a timely diagnosis and adequate treatment.

 Between 20 and 50 percent of the urban population in the region live
in dreadful conditions of massive overcrowding, extreme
poverty, violence and marginalization; they do not have access to
basic primary health care or sewage services; in the rural areas over
60% do not have these services and 50% also lack drinking water. The
absence of adequate systems of sewage services, drinking water
supplies and medical care raises by over 40% the risk of death from
diarrhea, cholera, typhoid fever and other transmissible diseases.

Food and nutritional deficiencies impact on children's defense
mechanisms increasing exponentially their sensitivity to non-
transmissible chronic diseases. The ECLA has estimated that this year
2000, approximately 36 percent of all children under 2 years of age
are in a high risk food situation which is worse still in the rural
areas where about 46 percent are in jeopardy due to generally
precarious sanitation conditions and greater difficulties to gain
access to public health care.

The poor segments of the population are affected by illnesses
associated to deprivation; in the case of vitamin A deficiency, which
is considered one of the main causes of blindness, it affects
millions of children under 5 years of age in the region.

The direct cost of vaccines for the immunization of a child under one
year of age against six preventable child diseases such as
diphtheria, measles, whooping cough, poliomyelitis, tuberculosis and
tetanus is lower than 80 cents of a US dollar. However, the World
Health Organization has reported that all over the area of the
Americas, including the United States and Canada, immunization
coverage of children under one year against these diseases ranges
from 85 to 90 percent, thus it is estimated that over 15 million
children in the hemisphere, under 5 years of age, are not
protected from those six diseases.

The average maternal death for Latin America and the Caribbean
region amounts to 200 per 100,000 births while in the developed
nations the figure is about 15. Therefore, in our region, no less
than 50,000 children are motherless due to this cause only. Moreover,
for every dead mother hundreds of those who survive suffer from
chronic problems resulting from undernourishment and inadequate care
during pregnancy and delivery. Thus, millions of mothers suffer some
kind of chronic health problem related to the absence of effectual
medical care during pregnancy and delivery. Two basic indicators,
that is, infant and maternal mortality rates, show that every year
6.5 more children and 12.6 more mothers die in Latin America and the
Caribbean region than in the developed nations per 1000 live births.

On the other hand, of the 12 million children born very year, almost
2 million are born to adolescent mothers.

The HIV/AIDS keeps growing at a dangerous pace in the region and,
according to data from UNAIDS, 1,700,000 people are already infected.
UNICEF has indicated that 65,000 new children are infected every
year, 90% of them by their own mothers. Consequently, the number of
orphans due to this cause only is already 195,000. In Latin  America
and the Caribbean region over 78,000 people have died of AIDS.

As for education, it is estimated that 20% of children join the
educational system late, 42% do not get through the first grade and
30% do not get through the second. Only 80% of children in the region
make it to fourth grade and just 73% to the fifth. Eight out of every
ten students attend school for seven years but the average schooling
is approximately four grades. Pre-school education coverage in the
region reaches an average of 15 percent.

Likewise, child labor expands like a real pest. Close to 20 million
children under 15 years of age are working and over half of them are
girls, most performing tasks that are neither recognized nor reported
in the official statistics. According to PAHO, violence has become
one of the main causes of death among children 5 to 15 years old.
Although exact figures on child abuse are not available, several
studies conducted by UNICEF indicate that no less than 6 million
children and adolescents are victims of severe aggressions and 80,000
of them die every year due to home violence.

A study conducted in 1996 by the World Conference on Sexual
Exploitation revealed that the previous year 47 percent of girls
sexually exploited in seven countries of the regions had been the
victims of rape and violence at home. Almost half of these girls had
been initiated in commercial sexual practices between the ages of 9
and 13, and from 50 to 80 percent of them were on drugs.

Hundreds of thousands of boys and girls work and live in the streets
and in some capitals 46% of women involved in prostitution are under
16 years old.

I rather avoid here the political and economic causes of this tragedy
since they are very familiar to you.

Finally,  I would only add -as it is my duty-- that if infant
mortality rate in the Latin American and Caribbean region were
similar to the 6.4 per 1000 live births in the first year of life and
the 8.3 for children under 5 reached by Cuba --despite the fact that
it has been isolated, harassed and subjected to a ruthless economic
warfare for over 40 years-- almost 400,000 children would have
survived every year; 99.2% would have pre-school education coverage;
99.9% would be enrolled in school by the age of 6 and 99.7% would
remain in school up to sixth grade. Also, 98.9% of the total first
grade enrollment would have passed the sixth grade and 99.9%
would have enter junior high school while 99.5% of these graduates
would go on to senior high school or technical school. They could
have obtained the first prizes in the Olympiads of Knowledge and
there would not be children in need of special education without
schools. Actually, there would not be illiterates and the average
educational level of the adult population would be higher than the
ninth grade; lastly, there would not be one child under 16 years of
age working for a living.

Our tough experience has demonstrated that a lot can be done with
very little resources. To conclude, I wish to express my appreciation
to all Heads of State and Government present here all of whom --with
two exceptions-- voted for the Resolution against the blockade of
Cuba adopted last November 9 at the United Nations General Assembly.

Thanks. " JC 



_______________________________________________
Crashlist resources: http://website.lineone.net/~resource_base
To change your options or unsubscribe go to:
http://lists.wwpublish.com/mailman/listinfo/crashlist

Reply via email to