On January 19, 2005, reflecting the
indignation of our people at the atrocities
committed on prisoners held at the US Naval Base in
Guantánamo, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs
presented the US governmental authorities in Havana
and Washington with a diplomatic note denouncing the
flagrant violations of human rights that the said
government is daily committing on Cuban territory
illegally occupied by the above-mentioned naval
base. This communication called for an immediate end
to that inhuman and criminal conduct.
The note reminds the US government
that the atrocities being committed on the base and
the very fact of utilizing that illegally occupied
Cuban territory as a prison, is in violation of
numerous instruments of international law and
international humanitarian law, and moreover,
violates the Coal and Naval Stations Agreement
signed in February 1903 by the government of the
United States and the Cuban government of that
period, in conditions of inequality and disadvantage
for our country, whose independence was
circumscribed via the Platt Agreement.
According to Article II of that
agreement, the US government committed itself to
doing everything necessary to ensure that those
locations should be exclusively used as coal or
naval stations and for no other objective.
It is also important to recall that
when the Cuban authorities were informed – although
not consulted – of the US government decision to
transfer a group of prisoners from the war in
Afghanistan to this US military enclave in
Guantánamo, the government of the Republic of Cuba
informed national and internal opinion in a
statement dated January 11, 2002, that "although the
transfer of foreign prisoners of war on the part of
the government of the United States to one of its
military installations located on part of our
national territory over which we have been deprived
of the right to exercise jurisdiction is not in line
with the regulations that gave rise to that
installation, we shall not create any obstacles to
the development of the operation." Moreover, the
statement highlighted that our government had "taken
note with satisfaction of public statements from the
US authorities in the context of the prisoners
receiving adequate and humane treatment."
The dramatic reality of the
prisoners detained on the Guantánamo Naval Base,
reported by the media to total 550 at the present
time, likewise reveals the double standards of the
US government in its hackneyed and manipulative
campaigning on behalf of human rights.
The arbitrary detention of these
foreign prisoners without the mediation of a legal
trial, as well as the torture and degrading
treatment to which they are being subjected,
constitute a gross violation of human rights and
numerous international treaties and conventions, in
particular, the Universal Declaration of Human
Rights and the Convention on torture and other
cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment.
With this hypocritical conduct, the
government of the United States has demonstrated the
falsity of its own public statements and once again
has lied to the government of the Republic of Cuba,
to its own people and to the international community
by concealing the horrific acts of torture, cruelty
and humiliating and denigratory treatment committed
on prisoners detained on the Guantánamo Naval Base,
only comparable with the torture inflicted on
inmates in the prison of Abu Ghraib and other
penitential establishments in occupied Iraqi
territory.
The Ministry of Foreign Affairs adds
its voice to the calls and demands of the
international community that the government of the
United States instantly end these flagrant
violations of prisoners that, moreover, are being
committed on illegally occupied Cuban territory.
Cuba has the total moral right
afforded by an irreproachable history in this
context and the right conferred on it to exercise
sovereignty over all parts of Cuban territory to
denounce these abuses and violations that the US
government is daily committing on the detainees on
the Guantánamo Naval Base and to demand the end of
these practices that violate international law.
Havana, January 19, 2005