|
Dear President:
Dear Delegates:
Today is a day of particular importance for the
United Nations. By casting a vote for the
fourteenth time on the draft resolution presented
by Cuba, entitled ‘The Need To Put An End To The
Economic, Commercial And Financial Blockade
Imposed On Cuba By The United States of America’,
the General Assembly will not only be making a
decision regarding a subject that affects Cuba; we
will also be voting in favour of the principles
and regulations of International Law, against the
extraterritorial application of laws and in
defense of the human rights of Cubans, Americans
and the citizens of the 191 States represented in
this Assembly.
It
is true that the United States Government has
repeatedly ignored the almost unanimous demand of
the international community and it is also certain
that President Bush will intensify the blockade
even more, making it the longest and cruelest of
its kind in history. But this doesn’t diminish in
any way the political, moral, ethical and legal
significance of this vote.
Never before has this blockade been applied with
the viciousness and brutally seen over the last 18
months. Never before has a Government of the
United States so cruelly and mercilessly
persecuted the economy and the right of the Cuban
people to live a decent and respectable life.
Ever
since May 6 2004, when the President of the United
States signed his new plan to annex Cuba, there
has been an unprecedented and hysterical
escalation in the application of new and
aggressive measures, including the threat of
military force against Cuba and the persecution of
citizens and companies from not only Cuba, but
also from the United States and the rest of the
world.
Due
to these measures, in May 2004, the Swiss bank,
UBS, was fined 100 million dollars, the largest
fine ever to be imposed on a banking institution
for having suposedly violated the sanctions
against Cuba.
On
30 September 2004, at the height of delirium and
absurdity, the so-called Control Regulations on
Cuban Assets were intensified and it was
established that ‘citizens and permanent residents
of the United States cannot legally buy products
of Cuban origin, including tobacco and alcohol in
a third country, even for their own personal use
abroad.’ The criminal sanctions for these
violations are fines of up to one million dollars
for corporations and 250 thousand dollars and a
maximum of 10 years in jail for citizens. This is
the first time ever that an American is banned
from smoking a Cuban cigar or from buying a bottle
of the incomparable ‘Havana Club’ rum, even if
they do so as tourists on holiday in another
country. Apropos insane acts, this draconian ban
should be entered into the Guinness Book of
Records.
On
October 9, 2004, in an act of aggression without
precedent in the history of international
financial relations, the Department of State
announced the establishment of a ‘Persecution
Group of Cuban Assets’. The very existence of a
group with this name should make the President of
the most powerful nation on Earth feel ashamed.
In
January 2005, the Office of Foreign Assets Control
redefined travel regulations in a way which meant
that American citizens were no longer allowed to
participate in meetings in Cuba that were
sponsored and organised by United Nations agencies
based in the United States, unless they had been
previously granted permission by the U.S.
Government.
In
blatant and shameless violation of the
international regulations regarding brand names
and patents, on February 24th, a legal maneuver
was put into force that would rob Cuba of its
rights to the Cohiba brand name, one of the most
prestigious among all Cuban cigars.
On
April 13, 2005, a guilty verdict was reached in
the case of the American citizen, Stefan Brodie,
the former president of the PUROLITE company, who
was accused of having sold ionised resin to Cuba
for the purification of the water in Cuban water
systems.
On
April 29th, President Bush ordered the Treasury
Department to hand over 198 million dollars from
Cuban funds illegally frozen in banks in the
United States in order to settle one of the
spurious lawsuits brought against Cuba by the
violent and extremist groups that, with total
impunity, organize terrorist plots against Cuba
from Miami.
In
April 2005, in accordance with the Helms-Burton
Law, the new directors of the Canadian company,
Sheritt, and their families, were denied entry
into the United States.
Also
in April 2005, the OFAC stepped up its persecution
of even religious organizations that have
permission to travel to Cuba for reasons related
to their activities..
In
2004, the United States Government fined 316
citizens and residents of the United States for
having violated the blockade. By October 12, 2005,
537 fines have been imposed.
In
2004, a total of 77 companies, banking
institutions and non-governmental organisations
from various countries had been fined for having
violated the blockade against Cuba; 11 of these
were foreign companies or subsidiaries of American
companies in Mexico, Canada, Panama, Italy, the
United Kingdom, Uruguay and the Bahamas. Another
seven companies, including IBERIA, ALITALIA, AIR
JAMAICA and DAEWOO were penalised because,
according to the U.S. Government, their affiliates
in the United States violated the laws of the
blockade.
Between January and October 2005, the number of
trips made by American citizens to Cuba fell by
55% compared to the same period in 2003, before
the new sanctions approved by President Bush were
put into force. Direct trips by Cubans residing in
the United States have fallen by 49%.
Cultural, sporting, academic, student and
scientific exchanges, as well as links between
Cubans living on both sides of the Florida
Straits, have been especially targeted by the
current Administration’s policy of aggression
against Cuba. It has reached such an extent that
uncles, aunts and cousins, etc, are no longer
allowed to travel to Cuba since, supposedly, they
do not come under the definition of family.
Your
Excellencies:
Over
these past almost 47 years, the blockade has cost
the Cuban people 82 thousand million dollars. No
economic or social activity in Cuba escapes the
consequences of such figures. There is not a
single human right of the Cuban people which is
not violated by this blockade.
Because of the blockade, Cuba cannot export any
product to the United States. Given the
geographical proximity, Cuba could export more
than 30 thousand tons of nickel or one million
tons of sugar to the United States each year at
prices 3 times greater that those currently paid
to the island. Also, even if it represented just
1% of the sales of cholesterol reducing medication
in the United States, we could be selling 180
million dollars worth of Ateromixol per annum.
According to the editors of the Harvard
International Review, this is the best
anticholesterol drug on the market. Furthermore,
Cuba would have exported 30 million dollars worth
of Havana Club rum and more than 100 million
dollars of tobacco products to the United States
last year.
Cuba
is only permitted to import agricultural products
from the United States, and even this has been
affected by extensive and renewed restrictions.
Cuba
is not permitted to receive tourists from the
United States. If, in 2004, the island had
received just 15% of the 11 million American
tourists who traveled to the Caribbean, Cuba would
have earned more than one thousand million
dollars.
According to diverse studies published in the
United States, between 2 and 4 million people from
the United States would visit Cuba if the blockade
were lifted.
As a
result of the blockade, Cuba is not allowed to use
the U.S. dollar in its transactions with the
outside world, nor can we receive credit or carry
out deals with American financial institutions,
their affiliates or even regional or multilateral
institutions. Cuba is the only country in Latin
America and the Caribbean that has never, in all
these 47 years, received credit from the World
Bank, or from the Inter-American Development Bank.
Even
if the blockade were just a bilateral issue
between Cuba and the United States it would still
be a very serious problem for our small country.
But it is much more. The blockade is an economic
war waged on an international scale with
incomparable zeal.
Moreover, the blockade is the extraterritorial
application of United States laws against the
countries that you are here to represent, your
Excellencies, and it is therefore a serious
violation of International Law.
Cuba
now has two new obstacles to overcome: the
impotent imperial arrogance of President Bush,
which has taken him to new, unprecedented heights
in this insane situation, and the increasing
globalisation of the world economy.
Why?
Because the United States controls almost half of
the world’s transnational companies, including 8
of the 10 most important ones. The United States
also owns a quarter of direct foreign investment
and imports 22% of all merchandise from around the
world.
The
United States owns 11 of the 14 largest
transnational companies in the I.T and
communications sector, and absorbs around 80% of
world electronic trade. Of the 10 pharmaceutical
companies that control the sale of almost half of
the world’s medicines, 5 are American. Some of
these products are not even produced by any other
company.
It
is for this reason that both investments made by
third country companies in the United States and
those made by American companies abroad, reduce
Cuba’s external economic space. Each and every
merger or purchase to be carried out between
companies poses, for our country, the often
impossible challenge of finding a new supplier or
market for our products.
Let
us then consider, Your Excellencies, the
extraterritorial regulations of the blockade:
The
Torricelli Act forbids subsidiaries of American
companies in third countries from trading with
Cuba.
Part
of the equipment and supplies used by Cuban
biotechnological research centres, which are now
producing even therapeutical vaccines against
cancer, was formerly supplied by the Swiss company
PHARMACIA. This was bought by the British company
AMERSHAM which, in turn, was bought by the
American GENERAL ELECTRIC, which then cancelled
all contacts with Cuba within a week of the
takeover.
When
the Brazilian company ORO ROJO was bought out by
an American company, it cancelled its sale of
tinned meat to Cuba, a product which formed part
of the diet of people suffering from AIDS; this
had been part of a project organized together with
the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Malaria and
Tuberculosis.
These were not, Your Excellencies, arms of mass
destruction; these were not drugs or prohibited
substances, but meat to be administered to AIDS
patients, as part of a UN programme. These sales
are persecuted and forbidden, as are the companies
which try to have normal trade relations with
Cuba; the right of our country and the right of
businesses in other countries are being violated.
The
CHIRON CORPORATION stopped trading with Cuba after
it was fined 168,500 dollars last year because one
of its European affiliates exported two children´s
vaccines to Cuba. These were not nuclear arms or
strategic missiles…they were children´s vaccines!
On
February 7, 2005 the FIRST CARIBBEAN INTERNATIONAL
BANK of the Bahamas cancelled its transactions
with Cuba due to the threat posed by the
Government of the United States. The British bank,
BARCLAYS, commented recently that it would do the
same out of fear of U.S. sanctions.
The
Canadian company, VECO, which operates partially
with American capital, had to cancel its planned
participation in the development of capacities for
fuel storage in Cuba.
As
soon as the Danish company, SABROE, was bought by
the U.S. company YORK, the operation that was
underway to sell refrigeration compressors to
Cuba, an integral part in the Cuban plan to
distribute soy yogurt to all children aged between
7 and 13, was cancelled.
The
blockade also forbids companies from third
countries from selling to Cuba goods or services
which use American technology or which have more
than 10% U.S. content.
It
is because of this that, since 2004, the Dutch
company, INTERVET, has been banned by the United
States government from selling avian vaccines to
Cuba, on the grounds that they contain an antigen
produced in the United States.
The
Mexican company, VAFE S.A. had to cancel the sale
to Cuba of a material needed to produce domestic
pressure cookers, due to the fact that it
contained a raw material from the United States.
In
September 2004, the Swiss airline, NOVAIR,
cancelled the lease contract with Cubana de
Aviacion of an Airbus 330, because it could not
receive maintenance owing to the fact that,
although the aircraft was made in Europe, it was
produced using American technology.
In
October 2004, the Japanese company, HITACHI HIGH
TECHNOLOGIES CORPORATION, was unable to sell an
electronic microscope to a prestigious Cuban
hospital for the same reasons.
The
blockade prohibits companies from third countries
– those which you, honourable delegates, are
representing here - from exporting any product or
equipment to the United States if it contains any
Cuban raw material.
Not
one company in the world is allowed to export
preserves to the United States if they contain
Cuban sugar.
Not
one company in the world can export automobiles or
any other equipment to the United States without
first proving that the metal used to make them
does not contain Cuban nickel.
The
blockade forbids ships that have taken merchandise
to or from Cuba from entering U.S. ports. Not U.S.
ships, honourable delegates, but ships from the
countries that you represent, may not enter the
United States if they have been to a Cuban port.
This is in accordance with the Torricelli Act,
signed by President Bush senior in 1992.
The
blockade imposed by the Helms-Burton Law,
prohibits companies from third countries from
making investments in Cuba, under the pretext that
these are linked to properties that could be
claimed by the United States. Because of this,
honourable delegates, executives from the Canadian
company, SHERRITT, have been penalized, and last
year, the Jamaican company, SUPERCLUBS, under this
same threat, pulled out of trade with Cuba.
The
blockade, Excellencies, violates the
constitutional rights of the American people. It
prevents them from travelling to Cuba; from
experiencing our culture and from having free
contact with the Cuban people.
When
Cuba today stands before you in this gathering,
she does so not just in defense of the rights of
the Cuban people, but in the defense of the rights
of the American people whom we hold in great
esteem and for whom we feel respect and
friendship; we in no way hold the American people
responsible for our suffering from this unjust and
genocidal policy that is being upheld by their
government against the Cuban nation.
And
we are here today in defense of the rights of the
entire international community; it too is being
violated by this unilateral and illegal policy.
The
blockade affects not only the rights but the
economic interests of the United States. According
to a study made in June 2005 and published by the
Business and Research Centre of the University of
Southern Alabama, if the blockade were to be
lifted, 100 thousand new jobs would be created and
an additional income to the value of 6 thousand
million dollars would be generated for the
American economy.
Honourable delegates:
Mr.
President:
After many years of doing so, we can observe that
the U.S. delegation, present here today, has
waived its right to participate in the debate that
will precede voting. I think it is because they
have no ideas, they have no more positions to
present. They refuse to do so, not even in defense
of their own position in the general debate. They
are overwhelmed by what has been said by a couple
of dozen delegates earlier on. They are silent,
probably, because in the words of President
Abraham Lincoln, ¨you cannot fool all of the
people all of the time.¨
I
must say that we understand this decision to be a
sort of moral surrender. More than power is
required. One requires ethics and moral authority.
And moral authority is not achieved by force. It
is not won by waging war or by using weapons.
Moral authority is won by exemplary actions, by
respecting the rights of others, even of those who
are poor and powerless.
I am
aware that they are on the agenda after the votes
have been tallied, they will speak after I have
spoken. Therefore, I am unable to comment on their
opinions, but I would like to assure you that, at
the moment when the Cuban delegation has the
opportunity for rebuttal, we shall challenge every
lie and we shall repeat every truth that needs to
be heard in this assembly.
Delegates;
Mr.
President;
Finally, let me insist that the blockade against
Cuba must be lifted. The United States government
must end its policy of aggression against Cuba.
Our right to self-determination must finally be
acknowledged by the United States government.
I
repeat with total clarity - the United States
Government is creating false illusions with the
idea that they can defeat the Cuban Revolution.
They disguise their plans; they call it
‘transition’, but what it really is would be the
cruel and bloody annexation of Cuba.
But
they are mistaken. They don’t realise what
courage, spirit of independence and political
consciousness the Revolution has implanted in the
people of Cuba.
The
determination and sense of dignity that has been
demonstrated by the five young Cubans, kept as
political prisoners in American jails, heroes of
the struggle against terrorism, and their families
– their wives, mothers, children in Havana who are
following this debate and trust in the sense of
justice of the delegates present here today - is
proof of the unbreakable spirit with which we, the
people of Cuba, defend, now and forever, our right
to build a more just, supportive and humane
society.
In
the name of these five heroes, honourable
delegates; in the name of the Cuban children and
young people, who have spent their lives under the
blockade; in the name of the generous, joyful and
courageous people living in Cuba who trust in you,
because they know that the world has seen the
Cubans fight, teach and cure, wherever they are
needed, because they know that the world knows
that Cubans don’t share their left-overs, they
share what they have; in the name of the right of
Cuba, honourable delegates, which is now also the
right of everyone, which is today the right of all
of you and of the peoples you represent in this
Assembly, I respectfully ask you to vote in favour
of the draft resolution ‘The Need To Put An End To
The Economic, Commercial And Financial Blockade
Imposed On Cuba By The United States of America’.
Thank you very much. (applause)
|