Why Cuban doctors deserve the Nobel Peace Prize

August 28, 2020
Issue 
Support is growing for the Cuban doctors of the Henry Reeve brigade to be awarded the Nobel Peace Prize. Photo: Granma.cu

Five years ago, I read the of Dr F茅lix B谩ez, a Cuban doctor who had worked in West Africa to stop the spread of Ebola. B谩ez was one of 165 Cuban doctors of the Henry Reeve International Medical Brigade who went to Sierra Leone to fight a terrible outbreak in 2014 of a disease first detected in 1976. During his time there, B谩ez contracted Ebola.

The World Health Organization and the Cuban government rushed B谩ez to Geneva, where he was treated at the H么pitaux Universitaires de Gen猫ve. He struggled with the disease, but thanks to the superb care he received, his Ebola . He was flown to Cuba. At the airport in Havana, he was by his wife Vania Ferrer and his sons Alejandro and F茅lix Luis as well as Health Minister Roberto Morales.

At the website Cubas铆, Alejandro 鈥 a medical student 鈥 had , 鈥淐uba is waiting for you鈥. In Liberia, the other Cuban doctors also fighting Ebola cheered for B谩ez. A Facebook page was called Cuba Is With F茅lix B谩ez, while on other social media forums the hashtag #F茅lixContigo and #FuerzaF茅lix went viral.

B谩ez recovered slowly, and then, miraculously, decided to to West Africa to continue to fight against Ebola.

No wonder that there is an international to have the Cuban doctors be honoured with the Nobel Peace Prize. This aspect of Cuba鈥檚 work is to its socialist project of international solidarity through care work.

US campaign against the doctors

When B谩ez returned to West Africa, his colleague Dr Ronald Hern谩ndez Torres, based in Liberia, on Facebook, 鈥淲e are here by our decision and we will only withdraw when Ebola is not a health problem for Africa and the world.鈥 This is an important statement, a reaction to the offensive campaign led by the United States government against Cuban internationalism.

The US Congressional Research Service that 鈥淚n June 2019, the [US] State Department Cuba to Tier 3 in its 2019 Trafficking in Persons Report,鈥 for, among other reasons, 鈥渁ction to address forced labour in the foreign medical mission program.鈥 This policy came alongside pressure by the US government on its allies to expel the Cuban missions from their countries.

Strikingly, the United Nations Human Rights Council 鈥 under pressure from Washington 鈥 said it would investigate Cuban doctors.

Urmila Bhoola (UN special rapporteur on contemporary forms of slavery) and Maria Grazia Giammarinaro (UN special rapporteur on trafficking in persons) wrote a to the Cuban government in November 2019. The letter made grand statements 鈥 such as alleging that the Cuban doctors suffered from forced labour; but there was no evidence in the letter. Even their statement of concern seemed plainly ideological rather than forensic.

In early 2020, the US government intensified its attempt to delegitimise the Cuban medical mission program. On January 12, US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo , 鈥淲e urge host countries to end contractual agreements with the Castro regime that facilitate the #humanrights abuses occurring in these programs.鈥

US allies in Latin America, such as Brazil, Bolivia and Ecuador, expelled the Cuban medical missions. This would become a catastrophic for these countries as the COVID-19 pandemic developed across Latin America.

Human Rights Watch channels US State Department

In July, the New York-based Human Rights Watch (HRW) published a accusing the Cuban government of formulating 鈥渞epressive rules for doctors working abroad鈥. It focuses on , adopted in 2010, that provides a code of conduct for Cuban doctors, including ensuring that the medical workers honour the laws of their hosts and do not exceed the remit of their mission, which is to take care of the medical needs of the population.

HRW merely offers this resolution 鈥 and other regulations 鈥 as evidence; it accepts that it cannot prove that these regulations have ever been implemented: 鈥淗uman Rights Watch has not been able to determine the extent to which Cuban health workers have broken the rules and law, or whether the Cuban government has enforced criminal or disciplinary sanctions against them.鈥 It is stunning that a human rights organisation would spend so much time with so little evidence assaulting a program that is widely recognised for bringing an improvement of living standards for people.

The organising committee for the group Nobel Peace Prize for Cuban Doctors responded to HRW with a stinging . It pointed out that the HRW report said nothing about the attacks on the Cuban medical program, including the official US government attempt to bribe Cuban doctors to defect to the US and the expenditure by USAID of millions of dollars to create disinformation against the program.

Even more egregious, the HRW document misreads the evidence it does offer, including the transcript of a dialogue between the Cuban ministry of health and medical workers. The HRW report uses as factual a text by Prisoners Defenders, a Spain-based NGO led by an anti-Cuban activist; HRW does not declare the political opinions of this highly controversial source.

The HRW report reads less like a credible account by a human rights organisation and more like a press release from the three Republican senators 鈥 Ted Cruz, Marco Rubio and Rick Scott 鈥 who recently introduced a to scuttle Cuba鈥檚 medical mission program.

But nevertheless, they persist

In a published in April, the Instituto de Comunica莽茫o e Informa莽茫o Cient铆fica e Tecnol贸gica em Sa煤de found that Mais M茅dicos (More Doctors) program of the Cuban doctors in Brazil improved health indicators of the population; this program brought medical care to remote areas, often for the first time.

Alexandre Padilha of the Workers鈥 Party (PT) was a minister of health under President Dilma Rousseff and a member of the team that created the Mais M茅dicos program. He that after the Cuban doctors had been ejected, there was an increase in infant mortality and increased pneumonia among the Indigenous communities where they worked; all this was catastrophic during the COVID-19 pandemic.

In June, President Jair Bolsonaro, who had expelled the Cuban doctors in December 2019, for them to start work again in Brazil; they were needed to compensate for Brazil鈥檚 reaction to the COVID-19 virus. Even USAID money to compensate for the loss of the Cuban doctors was not sufficient; Bolsonaro wanted the Cuban doctors to stay.

Cuban doctors to the rescue

Cuban medical workers are risking their health to break the chain of the COVID-19 infection. Cuban scientists developed drugs 鈥 such as interferon alpha-2b 鈥 to help fight the disease. Now Cuban scientists have that their vaccine is in trials; this vaccine will not be treated as private property but will be shared with the peoples of the world. This is the fidelity of Cuban medical internationalism.

On August 21, Ra煤l Castro 鈥 the first secretary of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of Cuba 鈥 at an event for the 60th anniversary of the Federation of Cuban Women. At the meeting, Castro mentioned that 61% of the medical workers in the Henry Reeve Brigade were women; since the start of Cuban medical internationalism in 1960, over 400,000 medical workers have worked in more than 40 countries.

These medical workers believe in the twin missions of medical care and internationalism; it is a lesson that they learned from the of Che Guevara, a doctor and an internationalist.

It is a lesson that should be learned in Oslo, Norway, as they adjudicate the Nobel Peace Prize.

[Reprinted from , a project of the Independent Media Institute. Vijay Prashad is an Indian historian, editor and journalist. He is chief editor of and the director of .]

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