http://www.granma.cu/ingles/ouramerica-i/22jun-Speech-raul.html

Havana.  June 22, 2012


Cuba aspires to good sense and human intelligence prevailing over irrationality 
and barbarity
Speech given by Army General Raúl Castro Ruz, President of the Councils of 
State and Ministers at the Rio-20 Summit in Rio de Janeiro, June 21, 2012, Year 
54 of the Revolution 

 MR. President;

Your Excellencies:

 Twenty years ago, on June 12, 1992, in this same conference hall, the leader 
of the Cuban Revolution, Fidel Castro Ruz stated, and I quote, “An important 
biological species is at risk of disappearing due to the rapid and progressive 
liquidation of its natural living conditions: humanity.” End of quote.

What could have been considered alarmist, today constitutes an irrefutable 
reality. The inability to transform unsustainable models of production and 
consumption is threatening the balance and regeneration of natural mechanisms 
which sustain life forms on the planet.


The effects cannot be hidden. Species are becoming extinct at a speed one 
hundred times faster than those indicated in fossil records; more than five 
million hectares of forests are lost every year; and close to 60% of ecosystems 
are degraded.


In spite of the landmark signified by the United Nations Convention on Climate 
Change, carbon dioxide emissions increased by 38% from 1990 to 2009. We are now 
moving toward a global increase in temperature which will place at risk, in the 
first place, the integrity and physical existence of numerous developing island 
states and will produce serious consequences in the countries of Africa, Asia 
and Latin America.


A profound and detailed study undertaken during the last five years by our 
scientific institutions is in basic agreement with reports from the 
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change and confirms that, during this 
century, if current trends are maintained, a gradual and considerable rise in 
average sea levels will take place in the Cuban archipelago. This forecast 
includes the intensification of extreme meteorological events, such as tropical 
hurricanes, and an increase in the salinity of underground water sources. All 
of this will have serious consequences, especially for our coastal areas, so we 
have initiated the adoption of appropriate measures.


Equally, this phenomenon will have serious geographic, demographic and economic 
implications for the Caribbean islands which, moreover, must confront the 
inequalities of an international economic system which excludes the smallest 
and most vulnerable.


The paralysis of negotiations and the lack of an agreement which could make it 
possible to halt global climate change are a clear reflection of a lack of 
political will and the inability of developed countries to act in accordance 
with obligations concomitant with their historical responsibility and current 
position. This has been demonstrated in this meeting, despite the extraordinary 
effort made by Brazil, for which we are grateful.


Poverty is increasing, hunger and malnutrition are growing and inequality is 
expanding, aggravated in recent decades as a consequence of neoliberalism.

During these 20 years, wars of a new kind have been launched, focused on the 
conquest of energy resources, as was the case in 2003, on the pretext of 
weapons of mass destruction which never existed, and the recent war in North 
Africa. Acts of aggression against Middle Eastern countries which can now be 
discerned will be compounded by others, with the objective of controlling 
access to water and other resources in the process of being exhausted. It must 
be made clear that attempting a new division of the world will unleash a spiral 
of conflicts of incalculable consequences for a planet already seriously 
insecure, and moreover, sick.


In the last two decades, military spending has grown to the astronomical sum of 
$1.74 trillion, almost double that of 1992, which is leading to an arms race in 
other states which feel threatened. Two decades after the end of the Cold War, 
against who will these arms be used?


Let us stop the justifications and egoisms and seek solutions. This time, 
everyone, absolutely everyone, will pay for the consequences of climate change. 
Governments of industrialized countries which are acting in this manner should 
not commit the serious error of believing that they can survive a little longer 
at our cost. The waves of millions of hungry and desperate people from the 
South toward the North will be uncontainable, as will the rebellion of the 
peoples in the face of such indolence and injustice. No hegemonism will be 
possible then. End the plunder, end war, let us advance toward disarmament and 
destroy the nuclear arsenals. 

We are required to make a transcendental change. The only alternative is to 
build more just societies; to establish a more equitable international order 
based on respect for the rights of all; to ensure the sustainable development 
of nations, especially those of the South; and place advances in science and 
technology at the service of the salvation of the planet and human dignity.  

Cuba aspires to good sense and human intelligence prevailing over irrationality 
and barbarity.



Thank you very much (Applause). 
 


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