GRANMA INTERNATIONAL 1998. ELECTRONIC EDITION.
Havana, Cuba
HISTORIC DEFEAT BY UNITED STATES IN GENEVA
Attempt to isolate Cuba is failing;
blockade is running aground
BY RODOLFO CASALS (Granma International staff writer)
THE defeat suffered by the United States in the
United Nations Human Rights Commission in Geneva will be remembered for a long time to
come. It fell like a bucket of ice-cold water on the anti-Cuba circles in Washington and
Miami who advocate a poorly executed policy of economic war and total isolation aimed at
destroying the Cuban Revolution.
For seven years, since 1990 - when the socialist bloc disappeared - the
United States has been imposing, through pressures and blackmail, a resolution condemning
Cuba for alleged violations of civil liberties and, since 1992, the designation of a
special rapporteur on human rights in Cuba. That rapporteur always based his reports on
documents supplied by the State Department and anti-Cuba organizations in the United
States.
On January 30, in its annual report on the human rights situation around
the world - except in its own country - the State Department once again condemned Cuba for
alleged violations and, in line with that idea, a few weeks later in Geneva the United
States once again presented a proposal to the UN Human Rights Commission for another
condemnation of Cuba.
But as these years passed, the U.S. resolution had been losing support,
as the world became more and more knowledgeable about what really goes on in Cuba, and the
fact that the U.S. blockade is the only massive and flagrant violation of human rights on
the island.
Thus, on the most recent vote on this resolution, on April 21 of this
year, 19 countries rejected the U.S. proposal, 18 abstained and only 16 voted in favor.
STATEMENT BY FOREIGN MINISTER ROBAINA
Cuban Foreign Minister Roberto Robaina noted that this vote goes to the
very heart of the United States' Cuba policy, and that it is a great setback for the plans
of the powerful against the poor. It was a triumph of justice and truth, he said, and the
people's resistance, their strength and loyalty to principles played an important role in
this victory.
"All those years when Cuba was condemned, a part of the world
believed what the Commission said. Today we call on the whole world to evaluate the result
of the voting," the foreign minister commented.
He reiterated that Cuba has always had its doors wide open, so that
people could see what has been accomplished, and even though it took years to defeat the
maneuver against Cuba in Geneva, the results are clear. An opprobrious and unjust
mechanism has been dismantled.
NANCY IS SAD
Cuba's victory in Geneva caused unconcealed upset and resentment within
the U.S. circles of power. The head of the U.S. delegation to the Commission, Nancy Rubin,
stated that she was very sad; the State Department deplored the fact that, as it put it,
some members of the Commission have chosen to turn their backs on the suffering of the
Cuban people; and the undersecretary for inter-American affairs, Jeffrey Davidow, admitted
that his government was very disturbed by the vote and would make that feeling known.
The three Cuban-American congresspeople reacted angrily to the vote and
tried to find a scapegoat. Robert Menéndez, for example, criticized the Clinton
administration for not pressuring the Latin American countries more during the recent
Americas Summit in Santiago, Chile. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen and Lincoln Díaz-Balart accused
the nations which opposed the resolution, or abstained from voting, of slander and
cowardice; and the Cuban American National Foundation labeled the vote a disaster for
humanity.
However, in almost all the world's capitals the opinion was that the
voting result was a slap in the face for the anti-Cuba mafia; that the hard line policy
against Cuba is losing support day by day; that the policy of isolation is failing and
that the blockade is running aground.
Furthermore, the decision made in Geneva took from the United States the
only argument it had within the UN to counterpose the General Assembly's yearly
condemnation of the economic blockade against Cuba, and the special rapporteur on Cuba is
now out of work.
DEALING WITH ISSUES OF REAL SIGNIFICANCE
In the opinion of the president of the Human Rights Commission, South
African Jacob Selibi, the vote also demonstrated that a small country can raise itself up
on its own feet and face a more powerful country. He went on to say that, without a doubt,
this vote would help make it possible for that UN body to concentrate on truly important
issues that must be urgently solved in the world, such as poverty and universal access to
development.
Selibi told the press that most of the delegates felt that Cuba's
victory was historic and that it would lead to changes. Selibi personally frustrated the
United States' attempt to postpone the voting on its resolution for 24 hours, in order to
exert more pressure on the weakest countries and avoid the defeat which could be foreseen.
The Cuban delegation also considered this a victory for the Commission, and expects to be
viewed with greater credibility now.
In the first four months of this year, the United States has met with
failure upon failure in its Cuba policy.
During his historic visit in January, Pope John Paul II publicly
condemned the blockade, calling on the world to open itself up to Cuba and for Cuba to
open itself up to the world. At that time, the international community lauded Cuba's
decision, for strictly humanitarian reasons and upon the Pope's request, to release
hundreds of counterrevolutionary and common prisoners.
A few weeks later, Guatemala reestablished diplomatic relations with
Cuba - bringing the number of countries which have diplomatic relations with Cuba to 165
(out of a total of 185 countries in the UN). Likewise, the Dominican Republic raised its
relations with Cuba to the embassy level. Diplomatic ties with Spain were normalized and
at the Americas Summit in Santiago, Chile - where the Canadian prime minister made it
clear that he planned to visit Cuba - the United States was criticized for its opposition
to Cuba becoming a full member of the Inter-American System.
The United States notes with pain that numerous official, commercial and
parliamentary missions are traveling more and more frequently to Cuba. From January to
April of this year, visitors included the presidents of Cape Verde and Panama; the prime
minister of St. Kitts and Nevis; the vice president of Iran; the foreign ministers of
Suriname, Ecuador, Ukraine, Haiti, Andorra and the Dominican Republic; Democratic and
Republican members of U.S. congress; the presidents of the parliaments of Malawi and
Zimbabwe; the deputy prime ministers of Dominica, Viet Nam and Saint Lucia; and the deputy
foreign ministers of Italy, Turkey and Belize. In addition, for the first time since the
start of the blockade, a U.S.-Cuba business encounter met in Havana to analyze the
prospects and potential of Cuba's economy and market.
Votes on resolution in Human Rights Commission
Voting |
1992 |
1993 |
1994 |
1995 |
1996 |
1997 |
1998 |
In favor |
23 |
27 |
24 |
22 |
20 |
19 |
16 |
Against |
5 |
10 |
9 |
8 |
5 |
10 |
19 |
Abstentions |
19 |
15 |
20 |
23 |
28 |
24 |
18 |
|