The Battle for Democracy in
Bolivia
Cuba Makes Its La Paz Clinic Available to the Bolivian People
- Cuban Ministry of Foreign
Affairs -
De facto authorities in Bolivia, on the
afternoon of July 21, publicly reported that the
building known as the "Clinica del Colaborador,"
owned by the Republic of Cuba, which was violently
raided by police on November 15, 2019, would be
made available, in the next few days, to treat
Bolivian citizens with COVID-19.
This unilateral
decision, which is presented as a humanitarian
act, constitutes a violation of the rights of the
Republic of Cuba as the legal owner of the
aforementioned property, preceded by disregard for
international law and an incessant campaign of
lies and distortions about Cuba, particularly
directed against the medical cooperation that our
country provided in Bolivia, a campaign that this
Ministry denounced in a statement, January 25,
2020.
It must be recalled that, in November of 2019,
Bolivian authorities, with the leadership and
support of the U.S. Embassy in La Paz, arrested
several Cuban health collaborators under false
pretenses and conducted searches and raids of
their homes, while publicly inciting violence
against our health personnel. This campaign has
not stopped and is being used for internal
electoral purposes.
The facility occupied by the Clinica del
Colaborador was purchased and expanded by the
Cuban State, in strict compliance with Bolivian
law. It is located at 163 22nd Street, on the
corner of Enrique Herson in the Achumani area of
the city of La Paz. In accordance with Resolution
0410 of April 4, 2007, the Bolivian Ministry of
Health, in accordance with the powers conferred by
Act No. 3351 of February 21, 2006, the Ministry
authorized the operation of the center to provide
care for Cuban professionals working in the health
and education sectors in the country.
The facility includes a 2-story house and a
3-story building. The small facility has 13
hospital beds, 6 for inpatient cases, 4 for
observation and 3 for intensive care. It was one
of the 158 health facilities where, by virtue of
the 1985 Scientific-Technical Cooperation
Agreement in the area of health between the
governments of Cuba and Bolivia, and its
subsequent updates, 18,015 Cuban health
professionals offered the sister Bolivian people
73,557,935 medical consultations, performed 1,
533,016 surgeries, of which 727,138 were
ophthalmological, and assisted 60,792 births. As
part of this collaboration, 5,184 young Bolivians
have graduated from medical school in our country.
In Bolivia, Cuba's health collaborators provided
their services in 34 Community Integral Hospitals,
119 Community Integral Centers and 5
ophthalmologic centers, in nine departments, 28
provinces and 42 municipalities in the country.
Since the above-mentioned raid, Bolivian
authorities have arbitrarily denied personnel from
the Cuban embassy access to the Clinica del
Colaborador.
The Cuban government has demanded the immediate
restoration of its rights as the legitimate owner
of the aforementioned property, through diplomatic
notes No. 1079/20, from the Republic of Cuba's
Ministry of Foreign Relations, April 13, 2020; and
No. 26/20, dated June 18, 2020, from the Cuban
embassy in La Paz, respectively, to which no
response has been received
We have attentively followed the tragic events
the sister people of Bolivia are facing, suffering
more than 60,000 SARS-COV-2 infections and more
than 2,000 deaths from COVID-19, according to
official data. Bolivia's health system has not
been able [to] effectively confront the pandemic,
and is on the verge of collapse. Unfortunately,
doctors and health workers have been infected and
died, among them several young Bolivian graduates
of the Latin American School of Medicine (ELAM) in
Cuba, who have honorably done their duty.
In this context, many Bolivian organizations and
citizens have addressed Cuba, both publicly and
privately, requesting support from Cuban health
personnel and medicines that have proved effective
with COVID-19 patients. Many have noted the
contribution that would have been made by the
Cuban Medical Brigade that was providing services
in Bolivia before the coup, if it had been
present.
The generous Cuban people have not renounced
their altruistic vocation. Aware that the fight
against the COVID-19 pandemic requires urgent
joint efforts of cooperation and solidarity and,
without relinquishing ownership of the Clinica del
Colaborador property or our rights as the
legitimate owner, the Cuban government makes its
use available to the sister Bolivian people to
assist COVID-19 patients, as long as the crisis
situation generated by this pandemic continues in
Bolivia.
This article was published in
Volume 50 Number 27 - July 25, 2020
Article Link:
The Battle for Democracy in
Bolivia: Cuba Makes Its La Paz Clinic Available to the Bolivian People - Cuban Ministry of Foreign
Affairs
Website: www.cpcml.ca
Email: editor@cpcml.ca
|