Does the OAS have a right to exist?
(Taken from CubaDebate)
TODAY I spoke frankly of the atrocities committed
against the peoples of Latin America. Those of the
Caribbean were not even independent when the Cuban
Revolution triumphed. April 19, when the Americas
Summit ends, is precisely the 48th anniversary of
the Cuba’s victory at the Bay of Pigs. I was careful
with the OAS; I did not say one single word that
could be interpreted as an offense to the venerable
institution, although everyone knows how much
repugnance it produces in us.
A fairly hostile dispatch from the British
Reuters news agency affirms that: "Cuba needs to
make clear that it is committed to democracy if it
wants to return to the Organization of American
States as demanded by a growing chorus of Latin
American governments,’ OAS chief Jose Miguel Insulza
said in an interview in the Brazilian O’Globo
daily.
"U.S. President Barack Obama is reviewing
Washington's decades-old policy of isolating
communist Cuba ahead of a Summit of the Americas
meeting this weekend, where Latin American leaders
are expected to press for an end to the longstanding
U.S. embargo on the island.
"Some countries are also expected to push for
Cuba to be readmitted to the OAS, from which it was
expelled in 1962 at the height of the Cold War.
"… Insulza cautioned that the OAS's democracy
clause remained an obstacle to the push to readmit
Cuba, a one-party state…
"We need to know if Cuba is interested in
returning to multilateral organizations or if it is
thinking only about the end of the embargo and
economic growth," Insulza said.
"This is a summit of countries with good will but
good will alone is not enough to cause change."
"’All 34 leaders at the Summit, from which Cuba
is barred, are from democratic countries,’ said
Insulza, a former Chilean foreign minister.
"’The general assembly of the OAS decided that
all member countries must adhere to democratic
principles,’ he said when asked about Cuba.
"But Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, one of
Washington's fiercest critics, has already said he
would seek to put Cuba at the center of the summit
debates.
Insulza informed O’Globo that Cuba’s
return to the organization does not only depend on
the Americas Summit, but on the OAS General Assembly.
The OAS has a history that contains all the
garbage of 60 years of betrayal of the peoples of
Latin America.
Insulza is stating that, in order to enter the
OAS, Cuba first has to be accepted by the
institution. He knows that we do not even wish to
hear the infamous name of that institution. It has
not provided one single service to our peoples; it
is the embodiment of betrayal. If all the aggressive
actions in which it was complicit were added up,
they would amount to hundreds of thousands of deaths
and accumulate dozens of bloody years. Its meeting
will be a battleground that will put many
governments in an embarrassing situation. Let it not
be said, however, that Cuba threw the first stone.
Moreover, the supposition that we are desirous of
entry into the OAS is offensive to us. The train
passed by a while back and Insulza has been informed
of that yet. Someday, many countries will be asking
forgiveness for having belonged to it.
Evo spoke at midday today. He has not as yet
given his last word on his attendance at the ALBA
meeting and that of the Americas Summit. He gained a
clear and decisive victory.
However, he did accept the reduction to seven of
the number of [parliamentary] seats assigned to the
indigenous peoples, from the 14 that he had proposed.
The adversary will no doubt try to exploit that
point in its intrigues against the Movement Toward
Socialism, banking on wearing it down.
The MAS will have to fight hard to ensure the
biometric electoral register and an alternative if
the oligarchy manages to draw out the manufacture of
the new register. His hunger strike was a brave and
daring decision and the Bolivian people gained much
in awareness.
Now the center of attention is focused on the
Americas Summit. It will be a privilege to know what
is said there; it will be a test of intelligence and
shame. We shall not be going down on our knees to
the OAS in order to enter the infamy.