Cuba: committed to multilateralism and advancing in the democratic international order

Photo: GranmaPhoto: GranmaHavana, July 22.- Cuba ratified the Ministerial Meeting of the Coordination Bureau of the Movement of Non-Aligned Countries, which concluded in Caracas on Sunday, its inescapable commitment to multilateralism and the efforts to advance towards a democratic international order, just and equitable that responds to the demand for peace and sustainable development of all peoples.

"The Movement of Non-Aligned Countries has managed to bring together a considerable number of countries with different political shades that have demonstrated the possibility of acting together on a number of important issues. It could be said that the clarity and decision with which this Movement now acts on the economic problems that affect the underdeveloped world, will depend largely on its future.

With this futuristic vision defined the Commander in Chief Fidel Castro, during the third Ministerial Meeting of the Coordination Bureau of that organization, held in Havana in March 1975, the leading role of Mnoal.

More than 60 years after its founding, Cuba ratified the Ministerial Meeting of the Coordinating Bureau of the Movement of Non-Aligned Countries, which concluded in Caracas this Sunday, its unavoidable commitment to multilateralism and the efforts to move towards a democratic international order , fair and equitable that responds to the demand for peace and sustainable development of all peoples; a world - in the words of Cuban Foreign Minister Bruno Rodríguez Parrilla - that "it will be possible if we fight in a joint manner to achieve it".

"On the economic level, underdevelopment, poverty, hunger and marginalization derived from the unjust international economic order in force, have been aggravated as a result of the impact of neoliberal patterns," described Rodriguez Parrilla.

In an international scenario that he described as "dangerous and complex", in which the security and well-being of our nations face unprecedented challenges and in which unity and solidarity for the peace and development of our peoples are indispensable, Mnoal must remain - by his own decision - as defined by the historical leader of the Cuban Revolution: anti-imperialist, anti-colonialist, anti-colonialist, anti-racist, anti-Zionist and antifascist, "because those principles are part of our conceptions and are in the essence, the origin, the life and history of the Movement ». (Granma)