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	<title>Cubadebate (English) &#187; Young Communist League</title>
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	<description>Cubadebate, Against Terrorism in the Media</description>
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		<title>Cuban youth honor Comandante Hugo Chávez</title>
<link>http://en.cubadebate.cu/news/2016/07/28/cuban-youth-honor-comandante-hugo-chavez/</link>
		<comments>http://en.cubadebate.cu/news/2016/07/28/cuban-youth-honor-comandante-hugo-chavez/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 28 Jul 2016 22:02:17 +0000</pubDate>
<dc:creator>Cubadebate</dc:creator>
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		<category><![CDATA[Hugo Chavez]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://en.cubadebate.cu/?p=9627</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[With the assurance that Hugo Chávez lives on and the struggle continues, as much remains to be done, Cuban youth will celebrate what would have been the late Bolivarian leader’s 62nd birthday this July 28. As part of tributes, encounters will take place, as have been held over the past three years, since 2013, organized by the Young Communist League (UJC) in collaboration with other Cuban youth and student movements and organizations as part of the cultural initiative Los amigos del Amigo (The Friends of the Friend).]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-9628" alt="Hugo y Fidel" src="/files/2016/07/Hugo-y-Fidel.jpg" width="300" height="183" />With the assurance that Hugo Chávez lives on and the struggle continues, as much remains to be done, Cuban youth will celebrate what would have been the late Bolivarian leader’s 62nd birthday this July 28.</p>
<p>As part of tributes, encounters will take place, as have been held over the past three years, since 2013, organized by the Young Communist League (UJC) in collaboration with other Cuban youth and student movements and organizations as part of the cultural initiative Los amigos del Amigo (The Friends of the Friend).</p>
<p>Speaking to CAN, Pedro Ortega, UJC National Committee representative reported that the main event will be held July 28, at the Historic Morro-Cabaña Military Complex at 9pm, just after the traditional cannon firing ceremony, to celebrate the life of Venezuela’s eternal Comandante-President and Cuba’s best friend, as fittingly described by Fidel.</p>
<p>He also confirmed the presence, among other guests, of Aleidita daughter of Comandante Ernesto Che Guevara and Dr. Jorge González Pérez, the Ministry of Public Health’s National Teaching director, who will recall the Chávez they knew and admired, as well as the historic leader of the Cuban Revolution, approaching his 90th birthday, and the extraordinary friendship between two great sons of Bolívar, Martí and Our America, two essential figures of modern history, brothers in the struggle and of dreams, noted Ortega.</p>
<p><strong>(Juventud Rebelde) </strong></p>
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		<title>Cuba does not fear the lies nor does it bow to pressures, conditionings or impositions, wherever they come from</title>
<link>http://en.cubadebate.cu/opinions/2010/04/04/cuba-not-fear-lies-nor-bow-pressures-conditionings-impositions/</link>
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		<pubDate>Sun, 04 Apr 2010 21:02:52 +0000</pubDate>
<dc:creator>Raúl Castro Ruz</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Opinions]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Raúl Castro Ruz]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Economy]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[Young Communist League]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://english.cubadebate.cu/?p=280</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Key address by army General Raul Castro Ruz, President of the State Council and the Council of Ministers and Second Secretary of the Communist Party of Cuba Central Committee, at the closing session of the 9th Congress of the Young Communist League, Havana, April 4, 2010, Year 52 of the Revolution
]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>KEY ADDRESS BY ARMY GENERAL RAUL CASTRO RUZ, PRESIDENT OF THE  STATE COUNCIL AND THE COUNCIL OF MINISTERS AND SECOND SECRETARY OF THE  COMMUNIST PARTY OF CUBA CENTRAL COMMITTEE, AT THE CLOSING SESSION OF THE  9TH CONGRESS OF THE YOUNG COMMUNIST LEAGUE, HAVANA, APRIL 4, 2010, YEAR  52 OF THE REVOLUTION</strong></p>
<p><strong><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-281" title="Raúl Castro" src="/files/2011/02/raul-castro-congreso-de-la-ujc-580x388.jpg" alt="" width="580" height="388" /></strong></p>
<p>Delegates and Guests,</p>
<p>Comrades all:</p>
<p>It has been a good Congress, since last October when it began with  the open meetings attended by hundreds of thousand of youths and  continued with the evaluation meetings conducted by the organization  from the rank and file through the municipal and provincial committees  where the agreements were worked out that would be adopted in these  final sessions.</p>
<p>If there is anything we have had aplenty in the little over five  years that have passed since Fidel made the closing speech at the 8th  YCL Congress, on December 5, 2004, that is work and challenges.</p>
<p>This Congress has been held in the midst of one of the most vicious  and best arranged media campaigns launched against the Cuban Revolution  in its 50 years of life, an issue I will necessarily have to refer to  later on.</p>
<p>Although I was unable to attend the meetings held prior to the  Congress, I have been informed of the essentials of every one of them. I  am aware that there has been little talk about achievements in order to  focus on the problems, and to look at the inside the organization  avoiding the use of more time than necessary to examine the external  factors. Such is the style that should permanently characterize the work  of the YCL in contrast with those that tend to look for the mote in the  neighbor’s eye instead of doing what it is their job to do.</p>
<p>It has been rewarding to listen to many youths directly linked to  productive activities to proudly explain in simple words what they do,  barely mentioning the material difficulties and bureaucratic obstacles  they must face.</p>
<p>Many of the shortcomings discussed here are not new; they have  accompanied the organization for quite a long time. The previous  congresses had adopted the corresponding agreements on them; however,  they have more or less been reiterated, which is proof of the lack of a  systematic and thorough control of their accomplishment.</p>
<p>In this sense, it is fair and necessary to repeat something  reiterated by comrades Machado and Lazo, who chaired many of the  assemblies: the Party feels equally responsible for every flaw in the  work of the YCL, very especially for the problems concerning the policy  with cadres.</p>
<p>We cannot permit that, once again, the documents approved become dead  letter or are kept in a drawer like memoirs. They should become the  guidelines for the everyday work of the National Bureau and for every  member of the organization. You have already agreed on the basics, now  you should act on it.</p>
<p>Some are very critical about the youth of today while forgetting that  they were young, too. It would be naïve to pretend that the new  generations are the same as those of past times. A wise proverb goes: A  man resembles his times more than he does his parents.</p>
<p>The Cuban youths have always been willing to take up challenges. They  have proved it in the recovery from the damages caused by the  hurricanes, the fight against the enemy’s provocations and the  defense-related tasks, just to mention some examples.</p>
<p>The average age of the Congress delegates is 28. They have been  growing up during these hard years of the Special Period and taken part  in our people’s efforts to preserve the main socialist conquests while  facing up to a very complex economic situation.</p>
<p>It is precisely because of the importance that the youth’s vanguard  is aware of our economic situation, that the Political Bureau’s  Commission –considering the positive experience of the analysis of the  same issue made with the Deputies to the National Assembly [of People's  Power] — decided to offer the YCL municipal assemblies an information  describing in all its crude reality the present situation and its  prospects. Over 30 thousand members of the YCL received this  information, just like the main leaders of the Party, the mass  organizations and the government at various levels.</p>
<p>Today, more than never before, the economic battle is the main task  and the focus of the ideological work of the cadres, because it is on  this work that the sustainability and the preservation of our social  system rest.</p>
<p>Without a sound and dynamic economy and without the removal of  superfluous expenses and waste, it will neither be possible to improve  the living standard of the population nor to preserve and improve the  high levels of education and healthcare ensured to every citizen free of  charge.</p>
<p>Without an efficient and robust agriculture that we can develop with  the resources available to us, –avoiding the dream of the large  allocations of the past– we can’t expect to sustain and rise the amount  of food provided to the population, that largely depends on the import  of products that can be grown in Cuba.</p>
<p>If the people do not feel the need to work for a living because they  are covered by extremely paternalistic and irrational state regulations,  we will never be able to stimulate love for work or resolve the chronic  lack of construction, farming and industrial workers; teachers, police  agents and other indispensable trades that have steadily been  disappearing.</p>
<p>If we do not build a firm and systematic social rejection of illegal  activities and different expressions of corruption, more than a few will  continue to make fortunes at the expense of the majority’s labors while  disseminating attitudes that crash into the essence of socialism.</p>
<p>If we keep the inflated payrolls in nearly every sector of national  life and pay salaries that fail to correspond with the result of work,  thus raising the amount of money in circulation, we cannot expect the  prices to cease climbing constantly or prevent the deterioration of the  people’s purchasing power. We know that the budgeted and entrepreneurial  sectors have hundreds of thousands of workers in excess; some analysts  estimate that the surplus of people in work positions exceeds one  million. This is an extremely sensitive issue that we should confront  firmly and with political common sense.</p>
<p>The Revolution will not leave anyone helpless. It will strive to  create the necessary conditions for every Cuban to have a dignified job,  but this does not mean that the State will be responsible for providing  a job to everyone after they have been made several work offers. The  citizens themselves should be the ones most interested in finding a  socially useful work.</p>
<p>In summary, to continue spending beyond our income is tantamount to  eating up our future and jeopardizing the very survival of the  Revolution.</p>
<p>We are facing really unpleasant realities, but we do not close our  eyes to them. We are convinced that we need to break away from dogma and  assume firmly and confidently the ongoing upgrading of our economic  model in order to set the foundations of the irreversibility of the  Cuban socialism and its development, which we know are the guarantee of  our national sovereignty and independence.</p>
<p>I know that some comrades sometimes get impatient and wish for  immediate changes in many areas. Or course, I mean those who want it but  not with the intention to play along with the enemy. We understand such  concerns that, generally, stem from ignorance of the magnitude of the  work ahead of us, of its depth and of the complexity of the  interrelations between the different elements that make society work and  that shall be modified.</p>
<p>Those who are asking us to go faster should bear in mind the list of  issues that we are studying, of which I have mentioned only a few today.  We cannot allow that haste or improvisation in the solution of a  problem lead to a greater one. With regards to issues of strategic  dimension for the life of the entire nation we cannot let ourselves be  driven by emotion and act losing sight of the necessary  comprehensiveness. As we have said, that is the only reason for which it  was decided to postpone for a few other months the celebration of the  Party Congress and the National Conference that will preceded it.</p>
<p>This is the greatest and most important challenge we face to ensure  the continuity of the work built in these five decades, the same that  our youths have assumed with full responsibility and conviction. The  slogan presiding this Congress is “Everything for the Revolution,” and  that means, foremost, the strengthening and consolidation of the  national economy.</p>
<p>The Cuban youth is destined to take over from the generation that  founded the Revolution; and leading the masses with their great strength  requires a vanguard that is convincing and that has a capacity for  mobilization through personal example; a vanguard headed by firm,  capable and prestigious leaders, true leaders and not improvised  leaders; leaders who have been through the irreplaceable forge of the  working class where the most genuine values of a revolutionary are bred.  Life has eloquently shown the dangers that come with the violation of  that principle.</p>
<p>Fidel said it clearly in his closing remarks at the 2nd YCL Congress, on April 4, 1972, and I quote:</p>
<p>“No one will learn to swim on the ground, and no one will walk on the  sea. A man is shaped by his environment; a man is made by his own life,  by his own activity.”</p>
<p>And he concluded: “It is by creating that we shall learn to respect  what work creates. We shall teach to respect those goods as we teach how  to create them.”</p>
<p>This idea that he stated 38 years ago, and that was surely received  with an ovation by that Congress, is another clear proof of the  agreements that we reach and then do not fulfill.</p>
<p>Today more than ever we need cadres that can carry on an effective  ideological work that cannot be a dialogue of the deaf or a mechanical  repetition of slogans. We need leaders who bring sound arguments to the  discussion, who do not think they own the absolute truth; leaders who  are good listeners even if they don’t like what some people say; leaders  who are capable of examining other peoples’ views with an open mind,  which does not exclude the need to refute with sound arguments and  energy those views considered unacceptable.</p>
<p>Such leaders should foster open discussions and not consider  discrepancy a problem but rather the source of the best solutions. In  general, absolute unanimity is fictitious, therefore, harmful. When  contradictions are not antagonistic, as in our case, they can become the  driving force of development. We should deliberately suppress anything  that feeds pretending and opportunism. We should learn to work  collegially, to encourage unity and to strengthen collective leadership;  these features should characterize the future leaders of the  Revolution.</p>
<p>There are youths all over the island with the necessary disposition  and capacity to take on leading positions. The challenge is to find  them, to train them and to gradually assign them greater  responsibilities. The masses will confirm if the selection was right.</p>
<p>We observe that progress is being made in the ethnic and gender  composition of the organization. In this sense, we can neither afford  regression nor superficiality; the Young Communist League should work on  this permanently. By the way, allow me to recall this was another thing  that we agreed upon 35 years ago, in the First Party Congress; but we  left its accomplishment to spontaneity and did not follow-up on it as we  should, even when this was one of Fidel’s first statements since the  victory of the Revolution and one he has repeated a number of times.</p>
<p>As I said at the beginning, the celebration of this Congress has  coincided with a huge smearing campaign against Cuba, a campaign  orchestrated, directed and financed by the imperial power centers in the  United States and Europe, hypocritically waging the banners of human  rights.</p>
<p>They have cynically and shamefully manipulated the death of an inmate  sentenced to jail on 14 charges of common crimes, who by work and grace  of a repeated lie and an interest in receiving economic support from  overseas was turned into a “political dissident,” a man who was induced  to persevere on a hunger strike making absurd demands.</p>
<p>Despite our doctors’ efforts the man died, something we also  regretted when it happened, and we denounced the only beneficiaries of  the event, the same who are currently encouraging another individual to  persist on a similar attitude of unacceptable blackmail. The latter is  not in prison, despite all the slandering. He is a free person who has  already served his sentence for common crimes, specifically for assault  and battery of a woman who is a doctor and director of a hospital and  who he also threatened to kill, and later an old lady, nearly 70 years  old, who as a consequence had to be subjected to surgery to remove her  spleen. Still, the same as in the previous case, everything is being  done to save his life; but if he does not modify his self-destructive  behavior, he will be responsible, together with his sponsors, for the  outcome we do not wish.</p>
<p>It is disgusting to see the double standard of those in Europe that  keep a complicit silence about tortures in the so-called war on  terrorism; that allowed clandestine CIA flights carrying prisoners, and  even permitted the use of their territory for the establishment of  secret prison centers.</p>
<p>What would they say if we had imitated them and, in breach of ethical  standards, had forcibly fed these people, as they have usually done in  many torture centers, including the one they have in the Guantanamo  Naval Base? By the way, these are the same that in their own countries,  as we see on television almost on a daily basis, use police agents to  charge on horseback against demonstrators, to beat them and attack them  with teargas and even with bullets; and, what about the frequent abuse  and humiliation of immigrants?</p>
<p>The mainstream press in the West does not only attack Cuba; they have  also initiated a new modality of implacable media terror against the  political leaders, intellectuals, artists and other personalities that  all over the world speak out against fallacy and hypocrisy, and who  simply examine the events with objectivity.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, it would seem that the standard-bearers of the so much  trumpeted freedom of the press have forgotten that the economic and  trade blockade against Cuba and all of its inhumane effects on our  people is in full force and even tightened; that the current US  Administration has not ceased to support subversion; that the unfair,  discriminatory and interfering Common Position adopted by the European  Union, sponsored from its inception by the US government and the Spanish  right-wing, is still in force claiming for a regime change in our  country, or to put it bluntly, for the destruction of the Revolution.</p>
<p>More than half a century of permanent combat has taught our people that hesitation is synonymous with defeat.</p>
<p>We will never yield to blackmail from any country or group of  countries, no matter how powerful they might be, and regardless of the  consequences. We have the right to defend ourselves. Let them known that  if they try to corner us, we will defend ourselves, first of all with  truth and principles. Once again we shall keep ourselves firm and  calmed, and we shall be patient. Our history is rich in such examples!</p>
<p>That’s how our heroic mambises fought in our independence wars of the 19th Century.</p>
<p>That’s how we defeated the last offensive of ten thousand troops sent  against us by the tyranny, and initially confronted by barely 200 rebel  fighters who under the direct leadership of Commander in Chief Fidel  Castro Ruz, and for 75 days, –from May 24 through August 6, 1958-engaged  in more than 100 war actions, including four battles in a small  territory of 406 to 437 square miles, that is, a smaller area than that  of Havana City. That great Operation determined the course of the war  and shortly four months later the Revolution was victorious. This  inspired Commander Ernesto Che Guevara an entry in his campaign diary  that I quote: “Batista’s army ended this last offensive on the Sierra  Maestra with its backbone in tatters.”</p>
<p>Neither were we scared by the Yankee fleet positioned in sight of the  coasts of Playa Giron in 1961. It was under their very nose that we  annihilated their mercenary army in what would be the first defeat of a  US military adventure in this continent.</p>
<p>And again we did it in 1962, during the Missile [October] Crisis. We  did not give in an inch despite the brutal threats of an enemy aiming  their nuclear weapons at us and gearing for action to invade the island;  neither did we do it when negotiating behind our backs the solution to  the crisis, the leaders of the Soviet Union –our main ally in such a  predicament on whose support depended the fate of the Revolution–  respectfully tried to persuade us to accept inspection, on our national  territory, of the withdrawal of their nuclear weapons, and we responded  that such inspection could eventually take place on board their ships in  international waters, but never in Cuba.</p>
<p>We are sure that it would be very difficult for worse circumstances than those to repeat themselves.</p>
<p>More recently, the Cuban people offered an everlasting example of  their capacity for resistance and their confidence in themselves when,  as a result of the demise of the Socialist Camp and the dismemberment of  the Soviet Union, Cuba sustained the fall of its GDP by 35%; the  reduction of its foreign trade by 85%; the loss of markets for its main  export items such as sugar, nickel, citrus and others whose prices  plummeted by half; the loss of soft credits with the subsequent  interruption of numerous crucial investments like the first Nuclear  Power Station and the Cienfuegos Refinery; the collapse of  transportation, construction and agriculture as we abruptly lost the  supply of spare parts for the equipment, fertilizers, animal food and  raw material for the industry, which caused hundreds and hundreds of  factories to be paralyzed and led to the sudden quantitative and  qualitative deterioration of food supplies for our people to levels  below those recommended for adequate nutrition.</p>
<p>We all suffered those warm summers of the first half of the 1990s,  when the blackouts exceeded 12 hours a day due to the lack of fuel for  electricity generation. And, while all this was happening, scores of  Western press agencies, some of them with ill-concealed jubilation, were  sending their correspondents to Cuba with the intention of getting the  first reports of the final defeat of the Revolution.</p>
<p>Amidst this dramatic situation, no one was left to their own fate;  this gave further evidence of the strength stemming from the unity of  the people that defend just ideas and a work built with so much  sacrifice. Only a socialist regime, despite its deficiencies, can  successfully pass such a tough test.</p>
<p>Thus, we do not lose any sleep over the current skirmishes of the  international reaction’s offensive, coordinated –as usual-by those who  do not want to accept that this country will never be crushed, one way  or another, and that we rather disappeared as we proved in 1962.</p>
<p>This Revolution started only 142 years ago, on October 10, 1868.  Then, it was a fight against a decaying European colonialism, but we  were always boycotted by the emerging US imperialism that did not want  our independence and waited for the “ripe fruit” to fall in their hands  by “geographic gravity.” And so it happened after more than three  decades of war and enormous sacrifices made by the Cuban people.</p>
<p>Now the external actors have exchanged roles. For over half a century  we have been attacked and continuously harassed by the now modern and  most powerful empire on the planet, assisted by the boycott implied in  the insulting Common Position, which remains intact thanks to the  pressure of some countries and reactionary political forces of the  European Union with various unacceptable conditions.</p>
<p>We ask ourselves, why? And, we simply believe it is because  essentially the actors are still the same and they do not renounce their  old aspirations of dominance.</p>
<p>The young Cuban revolutionaries have a clear understanding that to  preserve the Revolution and Socialism, and to continue having dignity  and being free, they still have ahead many more years of struggle and  sacrifices.</p>
<p>At the same time, great challenges hang over humanity and it is the  first duty of the youth to tackle them. They should defend the survival  of the human species threatened like never before by climate change, a  situation accelerated by the reckless production and consumption  patterns fathered by capitalism.</p>
<p>Today, we are seven billion people on Earth. Half of this population  is poor, while 1.02 billion are going hungry. Thus, it is worthwhile  wondering what will happen by the year 2050 when the world population is  9 billion and the living conditions on the planet are more  deteriorated.</p>
<p>The travesty in which the latest summit ended in the Danish capital,  last December, shows that capitalism with its blind market laws will  never solve this nor many other problems. Only conscience and the  mobilization of the peoples, the governments’ political will and the  advancement of scientific and technological knowledge can prevent man’s  extinction.</p>
<p>To conclude, I’d like to refer to the fact that on April next year it  will be half a century since the proclamation of the Socialist nature  of the Revolution and of the crushing victory over the mercenary Playa  Giron [Bay of Pigs] invasion. We shall celebrate these extraordinary  events in every corner of our country, from Baracoa where they tried to  disembark a battalion up to the western-most end of the nation. In the  capital, we shall have a popular march and a military parade, and the  youths, the intellectuals and the workers will be the protagonists of  every activity.</p>
<p>Within a few days, on May 1st, our revolutionary people throughout  the country, in public squares and in the streets that belong to them by  right, shall give another resounding response to this new international  escalation of aggressions.</p>
<p>Cuba does not fear the lies nor does it bow to pressures,  conditionings or impositions, wherever they come from. It defends itself  with the truth, which always, sooner rather than later, ends up being  known.</p>
<p>The Young Communist League was born on a day like this, 48 years ago. That historical April 4, 1962, Fidel stated in concluding:</p>
<p>“Believing in the youths is seeing in them not only enthusiasm but  capacity; not only energy but responsibility; not only youth, but  purity, heroism, character, willpower, love for their homeland, faith in  their homeland! Love for the Revolution, faith in the Revolution, and  confidence in themselves! It is the deep conviction that the youth can  do it, that the youth is capable of doing it; the deep conviction that  the youth can carry on great tasks.”</p>
<p>That’s how it was yesterday, how it is today and how it will continue to be in the future.</p>
<p>Thank you very much.</p>
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