MANAGUA — Cuba plans to send doctors and medicine to Nicaragua, extending its so-called medical diplomacy to the new government of leftist President Daniel Ortega, a longtime ally of Cuban leader Fidel Castro. Cuba’s top diplomat in Nicaragua, Manuel Guillot, said on Wednesday the doctors would work along the Caribbean coast, the most impoverished part of a country second only to Haiti as the poorest in the Americas. He gave no more details but said the region had been ‘effectively abandoned in terms of sanitation.’ Castro, who has been seriously ill since intestinal surgery last year, has sent tens of thousands of Cuban doctors and dentists to help the poor in other nations, helping win friends for his communist government. Ortega, a former Marxist guerrilla, was a close ally of Castro during the 1980s, when he led a Sandinista government that fought U.S.-backed rebels in Nicaragua’s fierce civil war. Cuba backed Ortega’s ambitious adult literacy drive after the Sandinistas took power in a 1979 revolution, although the civil war and a U.S. blockade eventually wrecked the economy. Ortega won Nicaragua’s presidential election last November, completing a remarkable comeback more than 16 years after voters […]
Thursday, February 1st, 2007
Cuba to Send Doctors to Help Nicaragua’s Ortega
Author:
Source: Reuters
Publication Date: 01 Feb 2007 03:03:43 GMT
Link: Cuba to Send Doctors to Help Nicaragua’s Ortega
Source: Reuters
Publication Date: 01 Feb 2007 03:03:43 GMT
Link: Cuba to Send Doctors to Help Nicaragua’s Ortega
Stephan: While we are lost in our militaristic adventures in the Middle East we are losing our presence and influence in that part of the world originally defined by President Monroe. Cuba in essence has made a Peace Corps, not an army, be its principal arm for projecting national presence. At a cost so modest it would not cover the cost of a day in Iraq, the Cubans have found a tactic to fulfill the strategy of winning 'hearts and minds' -- so often held out as one of our highest priorities. How ironic that an idea which began with President Kennedy, just as Castro was coming to power has, decades later been so effectively perfected by Castro.