We are accusing an hegemonic system of domination
Mr. Chairman:
I am speaking on behalf of Cuba.
We have come here to accuse those who lie; to tell our truths. And we have
come armed with reasons: an arsenal of just ideas and the history of struggle of our
people - the endeavor of which to achieve full justice cannot be subdued by nothing or no
one; and that aggressions, blockades and slandering have not been able to crush its
ironclad will of struggle or even dented its full independence.
The Commission on Human Rights is today more divided than ever and on the
verge of reaching an irreversible point of disrepute. On the one hand, we have the
representatives of the Third World: we are hostages to debt, victims of the unfair
disorder imposed around the world; we only own our poverty and backwardness; we are the
ones contributing millions of starving, poor, illiterate people; children and mothers who
die; the ones who have grievously sustained, with our suffering, the opulence of our
exploiters. At this Commission, we always stand accused. On the other hand, we have the
representatives of the rich and developed countries: they are the creditors; those who
consume almost everything that is produced; those who squander, pollute and forget that
they owe their wealth to us. And, in addition, they are the ones pretending to become the
accusers and judges of our countries.
It is high time we swept hypocrisy and double standards away from the work
of this Commission. Could the United States explain why they vote against considering
famine - currently affecting nearly 1 billion people - as an outrage and a violation of
human dignity? Could they explain that while an attempt is made to accuse Cuba they also
refuse to condemn the flagrant, large-scale human rights violations committed by the
Israeli army against the courageous Palestinian people?
The time has come to demand that an extensive reform and democratization
process be implemented on this Commission. We discuss the issue every year - and several
resolutions have been adopted for such purposes. But the truth is that the Commission on
Human Rights continues being an instrument at the service of the interests of domination
of the United States and its allies.
Could this situation change? Of course. But it is required that you, the
representatives of the developed countries, modestly accept the fairness of our demands.
It is required that you recognize that you are not the absolute owners of the truth. It is
necessary to renounce the racist notion that poor people cannot be also right.
We need a more democratic, tolerant world. Why does a small group of rich,
powerful countries want to impose an increasingly less democratic and pluralistic world?
Why don't we fight for greater tolerance - not only within countries but also in
country-to-country relations? Why can't the existence of diverse models of civil and
political ordering be accepted? What is the reason behind the attempt to have a single
model of democracy prevail? Didn't we already agree at the World Conference on Human
Rights that all peoples are entitled to self-determination and thus freely establish their
political conditions under this right?
The work of this Commission can be useful only if resulting from
respectful cooperation - never from dogmatic imposition and arrogance.
Cuba will continue to demand that this Commission cease being a hostage to
unjustifiable interests. Cuba will not give up its struggle as long as the right of all
countries is not respected; as long as there is no guarantee for the pluralistic,
transparent, objective and democratic functioning of this Commission.
Mr. Chairman:
The United States accuses Cuba of human rights violations. As we all know,
a genuine concern over the human rights situation in Cuba is not at stake in this
accusation. What is really at stake is whether a small Third World country can or cannot
choose its own path and build, in its own way, a future of equality and well-being for its
children.
I reject and deeply despise the accusation against Cuba - fabricated by
the United States and imposed on this Commission through extreme pressures. I steadfastly
uphold, looking each of you in the eye, that there are no human rights violations in Cuba;
that there is no justification whatsoever behind the attempt to single Cuba out at this
Commission; that such assertion can only be possible on account of the pathological
incapacity of the United States to accept Cuba as an independent country that no longer
belongs to it.
After more than 40 years of a genocidal blockade and an economic war;
invasions; terrorist acts; subversive attempts; sabotage; assassination plots against
Cuban leaders; biological warfare and many other acts of aggression, the Commission on
Human Rights is the most recent battlefield between the US oppressive design against Cuba
and our desires for independence, justice and development.
I am not going to spend any time explaining the Cuban reality and proving
the unfair, selective nature of the US accusations. There is really no need. You know it,
whether you recognize it or not. I will just say that the United States is the country
with the least moral authority to judge Cuba over human rights and democracy issues.
I cannot help asking: Has any one ever seen the police in Cuba beating up
the workers or the students during a demonstration, shooting rubber bullets at them,
sicking dogs or horses on them, throwing tear gas at them - as it happens on a daily basis
in quite a few places of the world today? You know that in Cuba leaders demonstrate
alongside the people.
Even the recent report of the US State Department on the human rights
situation around the world - which, of course, I do not view as legitimate and in which,
as we know, the only country that is not included is the US itself - recognizes that there
are no politically motivated deaths or missing people in Cuba. Despite their deep-rooted
hatred against our country, their obsession to condemn us and their lack of scruples, the
United States has not dared to lie, at least, in this respect. So transparent and humane
is our record, that it is impossible to deny it!
Can anybody in this hall mention a single case of torture, murder or
disappearance in Cuba? Does anyone in this hall know of a single case of journalists
assassinated in Cuba, or of the kidnapping of children - other than the failed attempt to
retain a Cuban child in the United States - or the sale of children, or child slavery?
Has any one ever heard of a death squad in Cuba? Has any one seen in Cuba
a demonstration of mothers and grandmothers crying out for their murdered or missing
children and grandchildren? Has any one of you heard that the Cuban Government, by
deceiving its people, has imposed an IMF adjustment program or given the country's riches
away to transnational corporations? Have you not wondered why after 40 years of blockade
and 10 years of dire economic constraints we retain, increasingly, the overwhelming
support of our people? The answer is that the Revolution belongs to the people, not to a
power-obsessed elite.
Leaders in Cuba view our responsibilities as a duty, an attitude to life,
not a lifestyle. Our authority is not only based on our democratic and transparent
election, with no money or corruption involved, but on our people's conviction that we do
not steal; that we are not above their needs and dreams; that we share their difficulties;
that we will not stop living an austere, committed life.
Should it be interpreted then that we think of ourselves as a perfect
society? No, we are not satisfied. We are only beginning. We are trying to obliterate
centuries of marginalization and injustices. We intend to raise education and culture to
levels that have never been achieved by our people. We are striving to pass down to our
children levels of equality, social justice and citizen participation never before
attained by any other society.
We will do our utmost to continue improving our achievements, to make our
political system more efficient and participatory, which is - we know it well - by far
more democratic than the one of our fallacious accusers.
In Cuba, we struggle for an increasingly tolerant and humane society. We
dream of an increasingly cultivated and educated people - which translates into a freer
people. We look forward to instilling all possible knowledge in our people, not only for a
select group. We dream of a people with profound social sensitivity, devoid of
selfishness, with deep-rooted humanist convictions. We dream of - and are ever closer to -
fulfilling those dreams, with a people for which Homeland means Humankind. A society likes
ours, in which men and their dignity is the cornerstone, does not agree with violence,
repression or deceit.
No pressure can be exerted on us. We do what we think is fair and
convenient. We have ethics. We have morale. And I should be emphatically clear about this:
We do not and will not accept either pressures or threats!
This is a time of definition. Whoever seconds the United States in its
wicked maneuvers against Cuba has no moral authority to talk to us about human rights. One
cannot reject the blockade against Cuba while colluding with the United States in the
manipulation used to justify it.
We have the encouragement and sympathy of the peoples of Latin America -
who know that our struggle is also for their rights; who recall Cuba's solidarity and
support at a time when US-sponsored dictatorships tortured, murdered and caused the
disappearance of hundreds of thousands of people in Our America.
We also know that Cuba's struggle is in favor of the respect for the
rights of everyone in the Third World - so that contempt and disregard can cease over our
right to a more equitable and just world, over our right to development and life.
Mr. Chairman:
The United States is upset about Cuba wanting to be free and independent.
And Cuba is not going to cease being ever free and more independent!
The United States is upset about Cuba being socialist. And Cuba is going
to be increasingly socialist!
The United States is upset about the fact that it is the people who rule
in Cuba. And in Cuba our people will increasingly determine its destiny!
The United States is upset about Cuba curtailing their imperialist and
hegemonic designs. And Cuba will increase its anti-imperialism and solidarity towards just
causes!
The United States wants to organize the party calling for the annexation
to the United States in a fragmented, weak Cuba. And Cuba will continue to have the party
of unity and independence, of social justice and dignity, of real equality and true
solidarity among all men and all peoples - without which there can be no liberty,
democracy or peace!
Forty years of heroic endurance underpin our ideas, our reasons, our
truths, our invincible strength, and our unflinching and indestructible freedom!
Rulers in the United States no longer know what to do about Cuba. In one
field or another, they will continue to sustain one defeat after the other. What they are
trying to achieve at this Commission, on the basis of humiliating pressures on its members
and a very high political cost, reveals that they have forgotten that famous thought of
King Pyrrhus: "With another victory like this, I am lost."
They have turned us into the freest people on Earth; no longer dependent
on their trade, their credits and their investments. We currently enjoy the rare and
almost unique privilege of being able to tell them the whole truth and destroy each and
every one of their lies, from this or any other rostrum.
We are not accusing their people, capable of being noble and idealistic;
we are accusing a hegemonic system of domination and a selfish, rapacious political and
economic order imposed on the world that is, in addition, unsustainable.
There are some who ask a gesture from us in order to please the United
States. The gesture that I make, on behalf of my people, is to raise my fist and loudly
proclaim the words that for forty years all Cubans have uttered in light of each of their
crimes and acts of aggression against Cuba:
Fatherland or Death! We shall overcome!