STATEMENT DELIVERED BY H. E. MR. FELIPE PÉREZ ROQUE,
MINISTER OF FOREIGN AFFAIRS OF THE REPUBLIC OF CUBA,
AT THE HIGH-LEVEL SEGMENT OF THE 60TH
SESSION OF THE COMMISSION ON HUMAN RIGHTS
Geneva, 17 March 2004
(Original in Spanish. Check
against delivery)
Mr.
Chairman:
For
17 years now, Cuba has been waging a battle at the
Commission on Human Rights against the cynical
attempts by the US Government to condemn it.
In
the early 80s, the far right – that was getting
ready to assume power with Ronald Reagan at the
forefront – criticized President Carter in the
famous Santa Fé Document through the following
words: “Curiously,” they said, “the current
Administration has not seriously attempted to
enforce its human rights doctrine against Castro’s
Cuba…” Thence was born the idea – strictly enforced
until today – of seeking Cuba’s condemnation in
Geneva to justify the 45 years of blockade and
aggressions that the United States has imposed on
the Cuban people.
Thus, in 1987, the United States submitted to this
Commission a draft resolution that was defeated.
In
1988 and 1989, it could not impose on the Commission
the condemnation of Cuba. We were not yet living in
a unipolar world, governed by the interests and
whims of a superpower, whose President – not
elected, by the way, but appointed by the Republican
majority of the Supreme Court – has taken the
liberty to put the following dilemma to the rest of
the world: you are either with the United States
or on the side of terrorism.
It
was only in 1990, amid the upheaval of what had been
the socialist bloc – when the end of history was
proclaimed and the enemies of the Cuban Revolution
celebrated in advance what they thought was the
inevitable fall of Socialist Cuba – that the United
States could, with the assistance of lackey
governments, impose for the first time ever a
resolution against Cuba at this Commission.
Those were rough years, but the Cuban people, with
the leadership of Fidel, did not surrender, did not
relinquish its fight for Cuba and for all those who
in the world defend both justice and freedom, for
all those who believe that a better world is
possible. Cuba’s dignified endurance against the
disgrace and the lies started to earn recognition
and support among the members of the Commission,
until the attempt to hold our country in
condemnation was unmistakably defeated in 1998.
The
United States, chagrined and debased, sought to
disguise its anti-Cuban scheme in 1999. Then, it
instructed the Government of the Czech Republic –
who else but such a despicable lackey? – to
officially submit the US text, while the superpower,
amid enormous pressures, threats and blackmails,
managed to get the minimum margin of votes for a
ridiculous condemnation of Cuba. Amid the scorn and
the disrepute, the farce lasted until 2001.
But
in 2002, the Czech Government already refused to
continue playing the disgusting role of Washington’s
toady. The peoples in Latin America, in turn,
demanded that their governments did not join the
condemnation of Cuba and refrain from becoming
accessories to the aggression and the blockade
against the small country by the powerful and
rapacious attacker. To top it off, the Bush
Administration, so shamelessly hypocritical and
cynical, had been excluded from the Commission on
Human Rights. After hectic and desperate actions,
that Cuba is fully aware of, it was the turn of the
Governments of Uruguay and Peru to then play that
infamous role against the will of their peoples.
We
all remember how last year the US Ambassador stated:
“I agree with anything that means the condemnation
of Cuba.” Seldom did this Commission have so much
fun with the ridicule and the imposture of the
superpower – which, if there were an ounce of
justice and credibility in this forum, would stand
accused for its crimes and the haughty violation of
every one else’s right.
That
has been the story. And what will happen this year?
Will the US Government refrain from fabricating
Cuba’s condemnation? Impossible. It needs it to
justify its ruthless blockade and its plans of
military aggression.
Will
the European Union finally face the US attempt to
condemn Cuba? No, I do not think so. And we all know
why. Some will say it is because of ancient wisdom.
Others know it is because of hypocrisy and double
standards. Will it then present a resolution
condemning the human rights violations, even of
European citizens, at the concentration camp that
the United States built in the territory illegally
occupied by its naval base in Guantánamo? No, I do
not think so either. Will it by any chance denounce
the serious human rights violations being committed
against the five Cuban political prisoners sentenced
to several life imprisonments in US jails and the
impossibility of contacts with their relatives? No,
it will not do it. Whoever does not have the courage
to stand up to the unilateral hegemony of the
superpower should at least remain silent and not act
as an accessory to the aggression against Cuba. It
should defend the right of the small besieged
country instead of befriending the irrational hatred
of the aggressor.
Who
will be the new pawn at the service of the imperial
master? Rumor has it that it will be Costa Rica. Out
of a commitment to the cause of human rights? No.
Let us recall that it does not vote against the
appalling human rights violations and the crimes
committed by Israel against the Palestinian people.
Let us recall that Costa Rica transferred its
Embassy to Jerusalem. Would Costa Rica present a
resolution condemning the death penalty against
minors, women and mental patients in the United
States? No, it will not do it.
Therefore, by mid-April once again, this Commission
will be faced with the dilemma of condemning Cuba or
defending the right to independence, self-
determination and development of a noble and
generous people that has never been absent when it
has been necessary to fight for a just cause in the
world; a people that fought apartheid; a people that
always supported those who fought the bloody
military dictatorships sponsored by the United
States in Latin America; a people that has graduated
from its intermediate- and higher-level schools over
41,000 youths from 123 countries; a people that
today has more than 15,000 doctors working in 65
nations of the Third World.
Mr.
Chairman:
Cuba
rejects the idea that this is only a “procedural
resolution.” That is a lie! Everybody knows that the
United States will proclaim it as the condemnation
of Cuba. We all know that it allows keeping the
so-called “Cuba Issue” on the agenda.
I
also reject the allegation that Cuba has not
cooperated with the Commission. In 1988, Cuba
received a delegation from the Commission on Human
Rights; in 1994, it received the High Commissioner
for Human Rights, who has not yet been able to go to
the United States; in 1995, it received a delegation
of human rights NGOs organized by Danielle
Mitterrand; and in 1999, it received two rapporteurs
from this Commission.
Why
should there be a resolution asking Cuba to accept a
Personal Representative of the High Commissioner if
no representative is appointed to investigate the
crimes and the human rights violations committed by
the US occupying forces in Iraq?
Cuba
does not accept being accused at this Commission in
a high-handed, politicized and discriminatory
manner. It does not accept the fact that only Third
World countries are always the accused at this
Commission.
Cuba
does not accept, therefore, the request to receive a
representative of the High Commissioner. It is
nothing personal against the appointed official. It
is against the spurious mandate that brought such
request into being.
We
also reject the politicized and partial report
distributed by the Personal Representative of the
High Commissioner. She has ended up acting as an
instrument at the service of the US Government.
Cuba
vindicates the right to enforce its laws to defend
itself from the aggression. Cuba vindicates its
right to prosecute the mercenaries that cooperate
with the blockade and the aggressive policy of the
superpower that wishes to reconquer and subdue its
people.
Cuba
will not surrender, Excellencies, or accept
pressures or fall for naiveté.
Let
the attacker be condemned and not the attacked! Let
the blockade, the lies and the aggression against
Cuba come to an end!
Thank you very much!