|
Cuban Victory in the Human Rights Council
The Human Rights Council (HRC), having concluded
its fifth period of sessions in Geneva, decided
to discontinue the mandate of the so-called
Personal Representative of the High Commissioner
on Human Rights for Cuba, thus putting an end to
the manipulative efforts on the part of the
United States in the subject of human rights
against our country.
This decision of the body which will replace the
discredited Human Rights Commission constitutes
a historic victory in the struggle of our people
to enforce justice and to put an end to the
anti-Cuba exercise conceived by the United
States precisely as a pretext to maintain and
exacerbate its genocidal policy of blockade and
aggression against Cuba.
With this decision, the Human Rights Council
recognizes the unjust, selective and
discriminatory nature of the actions which for
two decades have been perpetrated against our
country, and it vigorously denies the rumours
about the resolutions and mechanisms which the
American government has succeeded in imposing
upon the defunct Human Rights Commission through
coercion, threats and blackmail.
Support from the members of the Non-Aligned
Movement and other Third World countries has
been essential in order to achieve this result.
Even the European Union countries, permanent
allies of the United States in its actions
against our country within the framework of the
former Human Rights Commission, had no other
option than to accept the discontinuation of the
discredited mandate against Cuba, as the only
way to attempt to give credibility to the
Council whose first year of existence is being
celebrated today.
This result constitutes an act of essential
justice for the valiant and generous Cuban
people, whose sons and daughters contributed in
the past to the disappearance of colonialism and
Apartheid in Africa, and who today offer
themselves modestly and selflessly to the
realization of human rights for millions of
people in more than 100 countries where today
the solidarity of more than 42 thousand Cuban
doctors, nurses, teachers, sports trainers,
engineers and technicians has made its presence
felt. It is an act of justice for the people who
today train more than 30 thousand young people
from 118 countries in their universities,
totally free of charge, and who have returned
the gift of sight to almost 700,000 people from
31 countries.
It constitutes recognition of Cuba’s prestige
and labour and of her Revolution whose
undeniable efforts in the promotion and
protection of all human rights for all, and in
the creation of a society that is ever more
just, more egalitarian, more human, cannot be
ignored or distorted.
It is a well deserved recognition of Cuba’s
defence of Third World interests, of her
denunciation of and resistance to the United
States' plans for imperial domination, to the
Cuba which, because of her worth, was elected
founding member of the Human Rights Council by
135 votes, more than two-thirds of the members
of the UN General Assembly, despite pressure by
the governments of the United States and the
European Union, who actively worked in
opposition to Cuba’s candidacy.
The result of the process of the Council’s
institutional construction, recently concluded,
in spite of the shortages and deficiencies from
which this body continues to suffer, is
favourable to Third World countries, organized
and bonded by the Non-Aligned Movement under the
Chairmanship of Cuba. The Movement played an
active role and saw to it that the Council
Agenda includes matters of particular importance
to the countries of the South, such as the
"situation of human rights in Palestine and
occupied Arab territories", "the right to
development", and "racial discrimination and
xenophobia".
Now, it remains to be seen if the industrialized
countries, who were using the old HRC as an
instrument to attempt to impose their ideas and
their political vision, are truly ready to work
on a basis of principles of universality,
impartiality, objectivity, non-selectivity,
constructive dialogue and cooperation, and to
avoid the double standards and politicization
which led to the discrediting of the late Human
Rights Commission, which had been transformed
into an inquisitional tribunal of the countries
of the South.
Cuba, who in her capacity as Chairman of the
Non-Aligned Movement has played an important
role in this process, will continue to do battle
in defence of the truth, of our sovereignty, and
of the interests of Third World countries.
Havana, June 19, 2007
"Year 49 of the Revolution”
(Minrex)
|