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Mr. Chairman:
I do not think it is necessary here to go over truths that are no longer
questioned by anybody, such as the ever-increasing lack of credibility and the
extreme politicization that today weigh down the work of the Human Rights
Commission. Disrepute is growing, time is running out. It is essential that we
democratize the methods of this Commission, reestablish with transparency its
purpose and rules; in a word, set it up anew. We need a Commission at the
service of everyone’s interests, and not hostage to the designs of a minority
or, as becomes more obvious every day, to the whims of the mightiest.
It
is absolutely necessary to banish double standards from this Commission. Did
those who today question the legitimacy of the elections in an African country
utter a word when, scarcely a year ago, amid the scandal, we had to wait almost
a month to learn who would be President of the United States?
It
is absolutely necessary to banish selectivity from this Commission. Last year,
the Commission adopted resolutions and declarations criticizing the human rights
situation in 18 countries of the Third World. Some of those, like the one on
Cuba, were imposed by using brutal pressure. Nevertheless, not one decision
mentioned any human rights violations in the developed world. Is it because
there are no such violations or because it is impossible to criticize a rich
country in this Commission?
It is absolutely necessary to banish inequality from
this Commission. A minority of rich, developed countries impose their interests
here. They are the ones who can have large delegations accredited here; they are
the ones who introduce most of the resolutions and decisions that are passed;
they are the ones who have all the resources to do their job. They are always
the judges and never the accused. On the other hand, here we are, the
underdeveloped countries, accounting for three quarters of the world population.
We are always the accused – and the ones who through great sacrifices and scarce
resources try to make our voices heard here.
It is absolutely necessary to banish arbitrariness
and the lack of democratic spirit from this Commission. Is it not shameful that
the United States is pressing to return to the Human Rights Commission without
having to go through a vote? Is it not almost laughable, if not truly pathetic,
the reaction with which the United States has wanted to take reprisals for its
fair exclusion from this body?
It is absolutely necessary to banish from this
Commission the attempt to ignore the defense of basic human rights for us, the
poor peoples of the Earth. Why do the rich, developed countries fail to openly
recognize our right to development and to receive financing to that end? Why is
our right to receive compensation for the centuries of grief and looting that
slavery and colonialism imposed on our countries not recognized? Why is it not
recognized our right to see the cancellation of the debt strangling our
countries? Why is it not recognized our right to overcome poverty, our right to
food, our right to guarantee healthcare for our peoples, our right to life? Why
is it not recognized our right to education, our right to enjoy scientific
knowledge and our original cultures? Why is it not recognized our right to
sovereignty, our right to live in a democratic, fair and equitable world?
Mr. Chairman:
Cuba considers that despite the differences in beliefs, ideologies and
political positions among us, there is – nevertheless – a common danger facing
us all: the attempt to impose a world dictatorship that serves the interests of
the mighty superpower and its transnational corporations, clearly stating that
you are either with them or against them.
Why do we not demand that the United States cease
unleashing wars that not only fail to resolve conflicts but in fact also create
new and more dangerous ones? Why do we not demand that it abandon its plans to
use nuclear weapons? Why do we not demand that it not scrap the ABM Treaty? Why
do we not demand that it commit itself to accepting the principle of
verification envisaged in the Additional Protocol to the Biological Weapons
Convention? Why do we not demand that it cease its unconditional support for and
complicity with the genocide of the Palestinian people perpetrated by the
Israeli army? Why do we not demand that it relinquish its attempts to turn the
United Nations Organization into a tool that serves its interests? Why do we not
demand that it contribute to the establishment of the fair, democratic and
unbiased International Criminal Court that we need and not to this warped
attempt to set up a court subjected to the will of the powerful? Why do we not
demand that it respect international conventions and the principles of
humanitarian International Law in its treatment of the prisoners taken in the
war against terrorism?
Why do we not demand that it sign the Kyoto Protocol?
Why do we not demand that it recognize the commitment to allocate 0.7% of Gross
Domestic Product as Official Development Assistance? Why do we not demand that
it put an end to unilateral protectionist practices and stop making the World
Trade Organization subservient to its interests? Why do we not demand that it
cease imposing arbitrary tariffs – as it just did with steel and other products
– that destroy whole branches of the economies of other countries? Why do we not
demand that it stop being the only country opposing the proclamation of the
right to food as a basic and fundamental human right? Why do we not demand that
it cease thwarting the formulas that would guarantee AIDS patients access to
drugs? Why do we not demand that it repeal the Helms-Burton Act and the
extraterritorial enforcement of its laws? Why do we not demand that it respect
the international legislation on intellectual property?
Why do we not demand that it give up the idea of turning the Human Rights
Commission into a tool to accuse and judge poor countries? Why do we not demand
that it cease to look for the mote in its neighbor’s eye when it cannot see the
beam in its own? Why do we not demand that it deal with the scandalous Enron
case and with corruption right in the US and stop lecturing about corruption
throughout the world? Why do we not ask it to give up the principle of “do as I
say and not as I do”?
And now, with all due respect, I ask you, as representatives of the rich
and developed countries: Why, if in private you agree with almost everything I
have said, do you remain silent and not lead the attack on these dangers
threatening us all? Is it perhaps that you have the right to relinquish your own
values?
Is it that perhaps the will and the interests of the
overwhelming majority of the Earth’s inhabitants do not need to be respected? Do
not the countries in the West – which up until yesterday were allies of the
United States in a bipolar world but today are victims as are we of this
dangerous and unsustainable order it is trying to impose – think that the time
has come to defend our rights together? Why not try to form a new alliance for a
future of peace, security and justice for all? Why not try to form a coalition that
will once again proclaim on its flag the aspiration of liberty, equality and
brotherhood for all nations? Why not strive for democracy not only within
countries but also in relations among countries? Why not believe that a better
world is possible?
Mr. Chairman:
I
cannot end without saying a few words on Cuba. I do so not so much for our
country – whose generous and brave people have defeated aggression and economic
warfare for more than forty years – but rather because we think that the
manipulations concocted and the forceful condemnation intended against Cuba
could tomorrow be sought in this Commission against any other country
represented in this hall. I am not, I repeat, thinking of Cuba – to which
nothing or nobody can deny a future of justice and dignity for its children –
but of the credibility of this Human Rights Commission and the United Nations
System.
The United States has had to face a new situation
this year. On top of its exclusion from this Commission comes the Czech
Government’s announcement that it will not be available to introduce the
resolution against Cuba this time around. Our country took note of this
announcement and will wait to see if such decision is final.
However, the US Government, including its highest
authorities, is making frantic efforts in Latin America, using a lot of stick
and little carrot, to get one or several countries in our region to agree to
play that infamous role. We trust that no Judas will now appear on the Latin
American scene.
I will not take a single minute to defend the
generous and noble work of the Cuban Revolution in favor of the civil,
political, economic, social and cultural rights of the Cuban people. I will only
say that there is no country that has the moral authority to propose any censure
of Cuba.
We will use all our strength to oppose the attempt to
single Cuba out. We will reject a resolution whatever its text and will reject
any other manipulation. We will not accept conciliatory appeals or exhortations
to cooperate, since they are not necessary.
Should any government offer itself for the anti-Cuban
maneuver, we are sure that it would not be doing so out of supposedly democratic
convictions or a commitment to the defense of human rights. It would be doing so
out of lack of courage to stand up to US pressures and that betrayal could only
earn our contempt.
We
very well know that our small country embodies – for billions of men and women
in Latin America, Africa, Asia and Oceania who are currently struggling against
despair – the certainty that it is possible to live in an independent country
with freedom and justice. Indeed, many millions of poor and exploited people in
the First World – who are joined by intellectuals, some middle-class people and
others whose ethics reject the injustices, immorality and ecological risks
prevailing in the world of today – share this same certainty and the same hope
with the nations of the Third World that a better world is possible and that
they are prepared to struggle for it. Seattle, Québec, Davos, Genoa and other
similar events prove that this is so.
Since these times, my fellow delegates, are not for
fears, concessions and weaknesses, I would like to put formalities aside and
implore to be forgiven if I repeat what I said last year when we were asked
subservient gestures for the US Government, concluding my remarks with the
slogan of a heroic people that does not yield and will not yield to the
mightiest imperialist power that has ever existed in history:
Motherland or Death!
We
shall overcome!
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