Miami Herald. Posted
at 7:58 a.m. EDT Friday, May 11, 2001
KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia -- (AP) -- Cuban President Fidel Castro praised
Malaysia on Friday for standing up to Washington and globalization and said that
Latin America needs a similar spirit of rebellion before it is annexed by U.S.
companies.
Castro received a warm welcome as he began a three-day visit to Malaysia and
held talks with Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad, a fellow critic of the United
States and what he sees as the U.S. drive to dominate the rapidly changing world
economy.
During a lecture on foreign policy, Castro called globalization and modern
capitalism a form of "plunder.''
"Malaysia is a nation that has rebelled,'' Castro said. "I have
been talking to the leaders of this country. I have been telling them that we
are very grateful for what they have done, because in Latin America we are in
very great need of this spirit of rebellion.''
Castro criticized the U.S.-led drive toward freer trade, most recently at a
Western Hemisphere summit in Quebec City that excluded communist Cuba and was
held under heavy guard against anti-globalization protesters.
Asked about the U.S. proposal to remove trade barriers within North America
and South America, Castro said, "It would be like putting the
chicken-eating fox in the cage with the chickens.''
U.S. companies would "annex'' Latin America and " impose their
culture on the world: drugs, violence, sex and pornography,'' Castro said.
Castro, 74, and Mahathir, 75, are among the world's longest ruling leaders:
Castro has been in power in Cuba for more than four decades and Mahathir has
ruled Malaysia for two.
They share a deep suspicion of the United States. But Castro's communist
Cuba is one of the Western Hemisphere's poorest nations, while capitalist
Malaysia is one of Southeast Asia's richest.
The United States is Malaysia's largest trading partner, while Cuba
languishes under a four-decade U.S. trade embargo.
Castro was welcomed at Parliament by an honor guard and salutes of
cannon-fire. King Salahuddin Abdul Aziz Shah gave him a state drive through
Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia's largest city, a rare honor.
Castro then met Mahathir at a hotel before the two men entered a limousine
together for official talks at the prime minister's office in the opulent new
capital city, Putrajaya.
They witnessed the signing of a framework agreement on economic, scientific
and technical issues.
Malaysia, the world's largest palm oil producer, will expand dlrs 10 million
of palm oil credits to Cuba by another dlrs 15 million.
"They talked a great deal about creating a more just and equitable
world order,'' Foreign Minister Syed Hamid Albar said.
Castro urged Malaysian business leaders to invest in his country, especially
the tourism sector, Syed Hamid said.
In the past week, Castro has also visited Algeria, an ally dating from the
revolutionary fervor of the 1960s, and Iran.
Copyright 2001 Miami Herald |