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This morning, the
Commission on Human Rights (CHR) in Geneva voted on draft resolution “Question
of Detainees in the Area of the United States Naval Base in Guantánamo”, which
was submitted by Cuba last 14 April 2005.
The result of the
voting of such text, 8 votes to 22 with 23 abstentions, is further proof of the
hypocrisy and double standard prevailing in the CHR, which our country has
publicly and repeatedly denounced.
As usual, the
United States government resorted to intimidation and blackmail to prevent the
adoption of this draft resolution.
Thus, that
government tried to silence international outrage in the face of the horrendous
photographs of tortures in Abu Ghraib and other U.S. detention centers, the
revealing testimonies of detainees and of other persons who have had access to
them, and the outery and condemnation of personalities from every walk of life,
of parliaments, international organizations, NGOs and the world public
opinion.
It will be recalled
that Cuba presented a draft resolution on this issue to the Commission on Human
Rights last year. Then, we did not insist on putting it to the vote, mainly at
the request of the European Union.
But at that time,
the evidence we have today, on the flagrant and systematic violations of human
rights of the detainees at the illegal Guantanamo Base, was not available. There
are over 500 prisoners from more than 40 countries, including Europeans and even
minors, and it was not known that apparently it was this facility where the
methods of torture, later extended to other U.S. detention centers located
outside its territory, were first tested.
Neither was it
known that such system of torture had been officially sanctioned at the highest
levels of the U.S. government and legally justified by a decision written in the
White House by the present U.S. Attorney General.
The scandalous vote
in bloc against this resolution by the countries of the European Union is an
additional indication of their submission to the U.S. government and of their
inability to pursue a policy of their own, even in an issue on which their
respective public opinions, the European Parliament and their national
parliaments have demanded a strong European position in condemning such
practices.
For example, the
Resolution adopted on 28 October 2004 by the European Parliament not only
requested the government of the United States to allow an impartial and
independent investigation on the allegations of torture and mistreatment of all
persons deprived of their freedom and under their custody, but also instructed
the Member States of the European Union to present a draft resolution on this
issue to the present session of CHR.
Hence, it was to be
expected that the abovementioned Cuban draft resolution would have been well
received, at least by the Member Countries of the European Union which, not
having presented their own text, as their Parliament had requested, should have
co-sponsored the Cuban initiative or, at least, voted in favor.
The Cuban
delegation held three rounds of consultation on our draft resolution, attended
by EU delegations, where their support was requested. In addition, the Cuban
Ministry of Foreign Affairs instructed our ambassadors to call on European
Foreign Ministries to ask for their co-sponsorship and their vote in favor on
this significant issue.
However, several
countries did not even receive our ambassadors and the Foreign Ministries of
others intentionally scheduled the meeting at a date after the vote in Geneva.
In no case did we have a positive response. What our diplomats received were
only evasive answers – at times courteous, at times disdainful and, even, many
times with shame.
More than one
official of European Foreign Ministries, when asked the reason for their
unwillingness to support the Cuban draft, responded that the European policy
consisted of “defending their interests while not opposing the United States”.
The extreme was that an European officer, seemingly furious, told a Cuban
ambassador that Cuba was to blame for the “situation created” in Geneva, in
obvious reference to the fact that European countries did not know what to do,
faced with the quandary of upsetting the United States or confronting their own
public opinion.
The truth is that
not a single EU country member of the CHR co-sponsored the resolution as had
been requested from them. The EU surrendered yesterday morning, as denounced by
Commander-in-Chief Fidel Castro Ruz on his TV appearance last night and agreed
to vote against the Cuban draft in bloc, in spite of the protest by EU countries
not members of the CHR, which – by not having to vote – argued for a vote of
abstention as it would not risk US retaliation.
But the worst is
that some of them actively worked in African, Asian and Latin American capitals
and even in the meeting room in Geneva, in close coordination with U.S.
diplomats, to prevent the adoption of the Cuban draft resolution.
The Cuban draft
resolution calls on the Working Group on Arbitrary Detention, the Special
Rapporteur on Torture, the Special Rapporteur on the Right to Enjoy Physical and
Mental Health and the Special Rapporteur on the Independence of Judges and
Lawyers – CHR mechanisms which the United States itself considers impartial and
universal – to determine, on the field, the truth of the serious charges being
brought against the U.S. government for its acts in violation of the human
rights and dignity of their Guantánamo prisoners.
Our people, like
hundreds of millions of citizens worldwide, have legitimate concerns over what
is happening at the U.S.-usurped Guantánamo Naval Base. We will not be held back
by the fact that the offender is the one that continuously presents draft
resolutions against our country at the Commission on Human Rights, which in an
unjustified, selective, discriminatory and politized manner, attempt to accuse
us of being violators of human rights, and being used as a pretext to maintain
and reinforce the economic, commercial and financial blockade and to create
conditions that would justify a possible aggression against Cuba.
Cuba has more than
enough moral authority and sense of justice to face the resolution against our
country, co-sponsored and supported by the European Union and other satellites
in the Imperial orbit, without having to resort sophistry of any kind;. Cuba has
more than enough gallantry to openly present its opinions and proposals, and to
request an investigation of what has already become an affront that shakes the
conscience of mankind.
Our moral standing
is based on the undisputable fact that political assassinations, disappearances,
extra-judicial executions, death squads, torture, humiliation and mistreatment
of detainees have never existed in revolutionary Cuba, neither during our hard
struggle for the final liberation of our people, nor during the 45 years elapsed
since the triumph of the Revolution.
In all, it is not a
surprise for Cuba that our draft resolution was not adopted at this bureaucratic
vote of the CHR. It was expected that EU countries and some others – with their
proverbial hypocrisy and double standard – wowed fail to overcome their
dependency on the United States, to have justice prevail, and to demonstrate
their much-ballyhooed concern for the respect of human rights
worldwide.
The countries that
voted against the Cuban draft resolution today have been exposed and have become
direct and public accomplices to the tortures, humiliations and violations of
the human rights of the persons illegally detained, including some of their own
citizens, at the US Guantánamo Naval Base and elsewhere.
With this vote, we
have fulfiled the valuable objective of putting an end to the impunity hidden
behind pretense and complicit silence regarding torture.
It has been proven
that the Commission on Human Rights is beyond cure. UN Member States, in order
to build a totally different and universal body that is truly at the service of
the noble cause of human rights, cooperation and dialogue, will have to avoid
the danger that the reform of the CHR does not give birth to a worse creature.
Our people will
never give up its struggle and will persist in its denounciation of the crimes
committed by the ruling fascist clique in the United States.
With a greater
morale than ever, Cuba will redouble its struggle in the defense of justice,
rightness and ethics in favor of the attainment, by all the citizens of the
planet, of the enjoyment of all human rights.
Havana, 21
April 2005
(Minrex) |