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Mr. President,
Permanent Representatives and Delegates,
Alexis García Iribar was born in Cuba, in the province of Guantánamo. He
suffered from a congenital cardiopathy known as persistent arterial duct. At the
age of 6 and after successive deferrals and hemodynamic complications, he had to
be submitted to an open-heart surgery on March 9, 2009, because the government
of the United States prevents the US companies NUMED, AGA and Boston Scientific
from selling to Cuba the devices ‘amplatzer’ and ‘embolization coil’ required to
perform a catheterization that will spare children from this type of surgery. I
could mention other 12 cases of children between the ages of 5 months and 13
years who have had to undergone a similar procedure in the course of the last
one and a half years –two of them underwent surgery after January 20 last.
Cuban children suffering from lymphoblastic leukemia who reject traditional
medicines can not be treated with the American product “Elspar” (Erwinia
L-asparaginase), created specially to treat intolerance. Consequently, the life
expectancy of these children is reduced and their suffering increases. The US
government forbids Merck & Co. to supply this medication to Cuba.
Cuba has not been able to acquire a Gene Analyzer Equipment -indispensable to
study the origin of breast, colon, and prostate cancer- which is manufactured by
the company Applied Biosystem (ABI).
Lactalis USA, a supplier of dairy products, was fined with 20 000 dollars by
the US government.
Since the election of President Obama, there has not been any change in the
implementation of the economic, commercial, and financial blockade against Cuba.
The blockade remains intact.
It continues to be an absurd policy that causes scarcities and sufferings. It
is a mass, flagrant and systematic violation of human rights. In the Geneva
Convention of 1948, it was classified as an act of genocide. It is ethically
unacceptable.
The blockade is an uncultured act of arrogance. Recently, the US government
prevented the New York Philharmonic Orchestra from performing in Cuba. Cuban
artists can not receive any compensation for their performances before American
audiences. How can artistic creation be considered a crime?
Microsoft blocked Cuba’s access to Windows Live because, as can be read after
click-opening that tool, that is the way it goes for “users from countries
submitted to the US embargo”. And so it happens with the web pages ‘Cisco
System’, ‘SolidWorks’ and ‘Symantec’.
The blockade imposes restrictions on Cuba’s bandwidth and connectivity. Cuba
is not allowed to connect to the fiber optics submarine cables that cross nearby
our coasts.
Why does the US government hinder free flow of information and access to the
new technologies?
These inhumane prohibitions, improper of present times, are applied not only
against Cuba, but also against the countries that you represent.
Philips Medical failed to comply with the contract to supply spare parts for
medical equipment bought at a total cost of 72.7 million dollars, which were
installed in Cuba and in Venezuela. Besides, that company was fined with 200 000
dollars. This is a company from the Netherlands against which the US applied the
extraterritorial precepts of the blockade.
Hitachi stated that it can not sell to Cuba an Electronic Transmission
Microscope, which is indispensable for pathological anatomy studies; and Toshiba
stated the same about a Gamma Chamber and other magnetic resonance and high
precision ultra-sound equipment. These are Japanese companies against which the
US also applies the blockade.
The US government forbade the food company ‘Sensient Flavors’, a subsidiary
registered and based in Canada, to export to Cuba.
‘Siemens’, a German company, refused to sell to Cuba one 125 Mw transformer
for, as it said, it was the “obligation to follow certain US rules”. One of its
subsidiaries based in Denmark could not supply equipment for a cement factory in
Cuba because of the ban imposed by the US.
The ‘Australia & New Zealand Bank Group’ (ANZ), based in Australia, was
imposed a fine worth millions for doing operations with Cuba.
One thousand, nine hundred and forty one vessels that had touched Cuban ports
between July of 2008 and 2009 were banned from entering any US port for a period
of 180 days.
The UN Secretary-General’s report, which also includes the report submitted
by Cuba, contains many other examples.
The US representatives lie when they assert that the blockade is a bilateral
issue. The extraterritorial implementation of the blockade laws, such as the
Helms-Burton and Torricelly Acts, against the States represented here, is a
serious violation of International Law, the UN Charter, and the freedom of trade
and navigation. In recent months, the blockade laws have been applied at least
against 56 countries. It is then up to the General Assembly to discuss this
issue.
According to recent polls made by institutions of this country, 76 per cent
of American citizens oppose the blockade. To disregard the wishes for a change
and maintain the blockade is antidemocratic.
In times characterized by unemployment and economic crisis, the Cuban market
is banned for American business people. They are not allowed to invest in Cuba.
International companies face no American competition in Cuba because the US
government prohibits it.
What could be wrong in allowing American citizens to access Cuban products?
Who could be affected by the creation of new jobs in US ports as a result of the
development of normal commercial relations between both countries? Why can’t
American citizens have access to Cuban state-of-the-art medicine against cancer
or diabetes, or the technologies required to manufacture them, which are only
available in Cuba? Why Bacardi, which paid for the lobby that imposed the
Helms-Burton Act, is avoiding competition and forcing American citizens to pay a
higher price for a poor imitation of the Cuban rum? Why should a Cuban cigar be
something inaccessible and exotic in this country?
On September 11 last,
the US President seemed to remain stuck in the past when he decided to extend
the implementation of the blockade for another year, claiming it was “in the US
national interest” and based on the Trade with the Enemy Act of 1917, applicable
only to war situations and only enforced against Cuba.
No serious person could assert that Cuba is a threat to the national security
of the only super-power. Our strength is that of law, truth and reason. The
inclusion of Cuba in the spurious lists of alleged States sponsoring terrorism,
which is the reason that justifies some blockade measures, should cease. Our
Five anti-terrorist Heroes, who have been unjustly imprisoned in this country,
should be freed now.
On September 11, 2001, Cuba opened up its skies and airports so that any
American plane could have somewhere to land; it offered plasma and a health
staff. Later on it offered antibiotics and equipment against the anthrax and
made a generous offer to send Cuban doctors when hurricane Katrina lashed New
Orleans.
Cuba is the hospitable nation that invites American citizens to come for a
visit; it also invites American scholars and scientists to engage in cooperation
and join an enlightening debate. It invites American artists to build bridges.
It invites American companies to trade and invest.
Mr. President,
A few days ago, we all applauded President Obama when he said from this
rostrum: “International Law is not an empty promise (…) No nation should try to
dominate another nation.”
The international community can not accept –nor it could accept- that those
who govern in Washington feel they have the authority to implement coercive
economic measures and extraterritorial laws against sovereign States.
President Obama has a historical opportunity to lead a change of policy
towards Cuba and the lifting of the blockade. He is even vested with the
executive powers that would allow him, right now and all by himself, to
substantially modify the implementation of the blockade measures by granting
“special licenses” or waivers, making humanitarian exceptions or doing so for
the sake of the US national interest, even without modifying the laws that
enforce such prohibitions.
Any person who feels aggrieved and righteously defies the egoism and lack of
sensitivity of the conservative right, as President Obama did in Congress,
because “…a man of Illinois had lost his health insurance coverage in the middle
of his chemotherapy…and died as a result of that (...) And another woman from
Texas lost her health insurance when she was about to submit to a double
mastectomy”, could not , without failing to elemental ethics, prevent Cuban
children who suffer from cancer or a heart condition from receiving medicines
and medical equipment.
Using the same words expressed by Senator Kennedy when he referred to the
health reforms, the blockade against Cuba is also “a moral issue” that puts to
the test “the character” of the United States of America.
Mr. President,
It is true that Cuba purchases significant amounts of agricultural products
from the United States. However, the US representatives lie when they say that
the United States is one of Cuba’s trade partner and that do not say that such
operations are made in violation of the standards established by the
international trade system. Cuba’s payments are to be made in cash and in
advance, without any access to private credits. Cuban vessels are not allowed to
transport any cargo. Cuba is submitted to onerous and discriminatory procedures
and has to put up with continued maneuvers aimed at confiscating shipments. We
can not call trade to certain operations that lack a minimum reciprocity whereby
Cuba would be allowed to export its products to the United States. A country
that blockades another country can not be the latter’s trade partner.
It is a shame to see how the representatives of the US government lie when
they assert that the United States is the main donor of humanitarian assistance
to Cuba. The data they use are false. They mix, through fictitious and
ill-intended figures, the value of alleged licenses for operations that turn out
to be unviable with the amount of the assistance that Cuban immigrants residing
in he US send, through their own efforts, to their relatives. Successive US
administrations have persecuted and harassed the non-governmental organizations
that send humanitarian assistance to Cuba and, as a result of that, half of them
have stopped doing so.
One year ago, when Cuba was devastated by three hurricanes which caused
losses that accounted for 20 per cent of our GDP, the Bush administration did
not even respond to our request that the American companies be allowed to sell
to us, only as an exception, construction material, some covers to replace
broken roofs and grant private credits.
Mr. President,
At several meetings, the US delegates have referred to the steps that their
government has taken to dismantle the most brutal restrictions imposed by George
W. Bush on the travels by Cuban émigrés and the sending of remittances to their
relatives, as well as the resumption of talks on bilateral migration and the
re-establishment of direct postal services.
These actions are positive but they are extremely limited and insufficient.
The truth is that we have not even gone back to the situation that had prevailed
up until the early days of 2004, when the United States allowed a certain level
of academic, cultural, scientific and sport exchanges with Cuban counterparts,
which continue to be banned today.
Some vague proposals in the area of telecommunications would be simply
impractical as long as other restrictions still in force are not eliminated and
the practice of stealing Cuban funds resulting from these operations - which
remained frozen in American banks- by virtue of certain decisions adopted by
venal judges in violation of their own laws, is not discontinued.
After re-establishing the right of all US residents of Cuban origin to travel
to the Island, the irrationality of preventing American citizens from traveling
to Cuba -the only place forbidden to them in the whole planet- will become much
more evident. American citizens, who pay taxes, are not free to travel to Cuba,
despite the fact that the Constitution in this country allegedly guarantees
that. American citizens are not allowed to receive first-hand information about
Cuba.
The US representatives have also referred to a declared new spirit in their
relations with our country.
Cuba’s response is fully consistent with its historical readiness to talk
directly with the United States. As was done in the past by Commander in Chief
Fidel Castro Ruz, President Raul Castro Ruz has reiterated his willingness to
establish a dialogue on any aspect and negotiate all bilateral problems on the
basis of respect, sovereign equality, and without detriment to our national
independence and self determination. We have clearly stated that we will not
negotiate our internal affairs or our constitutional order. We are still
awaiting a response from the US government about the proposed agenda submitted
by Cuba on July last to start a bilateral dialogue, which I publicly announced
in this same conference room on September 28.
Mr. President,
The economic blockade has not met, nor it will, its purpose of bending the
patriotic determination of the Cuban people. But it generates shortages; it
restricts our development potential and seriously affects our economy. It is, no
doubt, the fundamental obstacle that hinders the economic development of our
country.
It is very difficult to estimate the cost it has had for Cuba. A rigorous and
conservative record of the economic damages it has caused amounts to hundreds of
billions of dollars, based on the current and decreasing value of that
currency.
The US representatives have said that our shortages result from the failure
of our system. But they lie, perhaps rather by ignorance than out of bad faith.
Thanks to our system, we have been able to resist for 50 years; and we have
developed despite the blockade. If they are convinced that our system does not
work, what do they need the blockade for?
In conditions of a true economic warfare and a vicious manipulation of the
media, under the effects of climate change and the global economic crisis, Cuba
is engaged in a deeply human and fraternal social and cultural work.
Our people are determined to move ahead, in sovereignty, in order to solve
our problems and perfect our political, economic and social system within
socialism. We Cubans have every right to do that, without blockades or foreign
pressures; without the funds worth millions with which the US government
finances subversion; without any foreign interference in the decisions that only
we are entitled to take.
That is the purpose of the resolution that we intend to adopt and I am
honored to present. To support this resolution would be an act against
aggression and the use of force. It would be an act in favor of peace, people’s
rights and hopes. It would be an act of justice towards the people of Cuba who
is today paying tribute to the memory of Camilo Cienfuegos, who was a young and
cheerful Commander at the Sierra Maestra Mountains, from whom we learned that
loyalty to our sacred achievements and our profound convictions is the only way
to victory
Thank you, very much.
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