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News > Latin America

8th Caribbean Peoples Assembly Debates the Crisis of Capitalism

  • The Cuban delegation called for the strengthening of the region's unity.

    The Cuban delegation called for the strengthening of the region's unity. | Photo: @CancilleriaVE

Published 16 August 2019
Opinion

This eight edition coincided with the 25th anniversary of the convention’s first meeting, also held in the Caribbean nation of Trinidad and Tabago.

Over 60 delegates from 13 countries participated Thursday in the VIII Assembly of Peoples of the Caribbean, which will taking place until Aug. 19 in Trinidad and Tobago, with an agenda to debate strategies countering imperialism. Those present agree that regional integration and collabortation is key to the countermovement solution.

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Cuban union leaders from the Central de Trabajadores invited the rest of the delegates to join the anti-imperialist meeting of Solidarity, for Democracy and Against Neoliberalism to take place in November in Havana.

During the meeting so far that began Aug. 15 The Union of Petroleum Workers of Trinidad and Tobago stated that the labor structure under neoliberalism reduces the worker's ability to organize because they don't have job stability, coupled with illicit hiring systems that also can be used to intimidate and mistreat workers hired using methods outside the law.

Puerto Rican delegates recalled the ​​​​​12-day protest on the island that successfully managed to oust former governor Ricardo Rossello. 

The countries represented for this 8th edition were Surinam, Martinique, Puerto Rico, Jamaica, Haiti, Barbados, Guadeloupe, San Vicente and the Granadines, Santa Lucia, Trinidad and Tobago, Antigua and Barbuda, Brazil, Dominican Republic, Venezuela. 

Haitian constituents at the meeting said that their nation's major protests meant to oust their allegedly corrupt president, Jovenel Moïse, "unites us," and continues the country's path to independence and against colonialism. Members from Haiti said, "each of the islands must move forward in a great movement for liberation. We must consolidate a Caribbean community and break all barriers."

The Assembly condemned the U.S. sanctions against Venezuela as "a move calculated in order to cause damage."

ALBA members said Friday that the conference "strengthens the struggle for Our America and for Internationalism. It is about building alternatives to capital ... and for socialism."​​​​​​​

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