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Author Topic: UN Human Rights Council holds inaugural session
M. Spector
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posted 21 June 2006 06:06 PM      Profile for M. Spector   Author's Homepage     Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
The new UN Human Rights Council has replaced the former UN Commission for Human Rights. The first session opened on Monday this week.

Here’s part of what the Cuban Foreign Minister had to say:


Speech by Felipe Pérez Roque, Foreign Minister of Cuba

quote:
Today is a particularly symbolic day. Cuba is a founding member of the Human Rights Council and the United States is not. Cuba was elected with the overwhelming support of 135 countries, more than two-thirds of the United Nations General Assembly, while the United States did not even dare to run as a candidate. Cuba relied on the secret vote for the same reasons that the United States was afraid of it.

Cuba’s election epitomizes the victory of principles and truth; it stands as recognition of the value of our resilience. The absence of the United States is the defeat of lies; it is the moral punishment for the haughtiness of an empire.

The election entailed a demanding assessment. Each one got what they deserved. Cuba was rewarded and the United States was punished. Each one had its history and the voting countries were well aware of it.

The African countries recalled that over 2,000 Cuban fighters had shed their generous blood in the struggle against the outrageous Apartheid regime, which the United States supported and furnished with weapons, even nuclear ones.

The election for Cuba came at a moment in which nearly 30,000 Cuban doctors were saving lives and alleviating the pain in 70 countries, while the United States reached that stage with 150,000 invading soldiers, sent to kill and die in an unjust and illegal war.

The election for Cuba came with more than 300,000 patients from 26 countries in Latin America and the Caribbean who were recovering their eyesight thanks to the cost-free surgeries performed by Cuban eye specialists. It came for the United States with over 100,000 civilians murdered and 2,500 American youths dead in a war concocted to steal a country’s oil and give away sumptuous contracts to a group of cronies of the President of the world’s sole superpower.

The election for Cuba came with more than 25,000 youths from 120 Third World countries studying in its universities and colleges free of charge. It came for the United States with a concentration camp in Guantánamo, where prisoners are subjected to torture and where the official statement of the prison wardens was that the suicide of three human beings “is not an act of despair but an act of war and propaganda.”

The election for Cuba came with its airplanes carrying Cuban medical doctors and field hospitals to places where there had been natural disasters or epidemics. It came for the United States with its aircraft secretly carrying drugged and handcuffed prisoners from one jail to another.

The election for Cuba came with its proclamation of the prevalence of lawfulness over force, defending the United Nations Charter, demanding and fighting for a better world. It came for the United States with its proclamation of “if you are not on our side, you are against us.”

The election for Cuba came with its proposal of setting aside the trillion US dollars annually spent on weapons to fight off the yearly death of preventable causes of 11 million children under the age of five years and 600,000 poor women at childbirth. In the meantime, it came for the United States with its proclamation of its right to bomb and “preemptively” wipe out what it scornfully called “any dark corners of the world” if its designs were not obeyed. That included the city of The Hague, if there were any attempts to prosecute an American soldier at the International Criminal Court.

While Cuba defended the rights of the Palestinian people, the United States was the main pillar behind Israel’s crimes and atrocities.

While under the striking force of Hurricane Katrina the US Government abandoned hundreds of thousands of people to their luck, most of them black and poor, Cuba immediately offered to send 1,100 doctors, who could have saved lives and alleviated their suffering.



From: One millihelen: The amount of beauty required to launch one ship. | Registered: Feb 2005  |  IP: Logged
maidenhead
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posted 22 June 2006 01:22 PM      Profile for maidenhead        Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
From the Globe and Mail article, "Louise Arbour, the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, said the council should rededicate itself to the “scaffolding of human rights” enunciated by former U.S. president Franklin Roosevelt, whose widow, Eleanor, was the first chairwoman of the commission more than 60 years ago.

“President Roosevelt's four freedoms – freedom from want, freedom from fear, freedom of expression and freedom of worship – challenged us to promote liberty though democracy, justice and an equitable distribution of resources,” Ms. Arbour said."

Against that criteria, a review of the human rights standards of the 191 UN member states should be interesting. Now, we all fall short of where we should be as nations, but I wonder - in particular - how nations like Saudi Arabia, China and Russia are going to answer some of those questions? Let's hope that specific cases like those of Tibet are a focus for that group in the not-too-distant future.


From: Toronto | Registered: Jun 2006  |  IP: Logged
ceti
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posted 23 June 2006 01:26 PM      Profile for ceti     Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
Most countries have poor human rights records. If you look at India, countless human rights violations are being conducted every day, but you never hear about them and those don't even include Kashmir or the restive Northeast. In Andhra Pradesh, thousands of undertrials are rotting in jails for years without formal charge, victims of police firings number in the hundreds or maybe thousands, corruption and capture of the state by local elites puts justice out of reach for the poor, etc...

So how human rights violations are discussed and what countries are singled out is very political. The US with the highest incarceration rate in the world, barely has a leg to stand on, as do many of the big countries.


From: various musings before the revolution | Registered: Jan 2005  |  IP: Logged
a lonely worker
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posted 23 June 2006 10:47 PM      Profile for a lonely worker     Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
Thanks for posting this M Spector!

The differences between Cuba and the elite's view to the world couldn't be more different. I'm glad he also targetted EU hypocrisy as well. It's about time the EU's brand of neo-liberalism started being exposed for the corporate lackey's they are.

One can also add Canada to the list of nation's that exploit the thrid world. Unfortunately there would have been no difference if the neo-libs were in instead of the current neo-cons. Although Martin did like collecting third world flags!

Even sadder, there probably would have been no difference if we had some of the "progressive" people voting as well; who would have probably voted for Guatamala or Colombia instead.

The Foreign Minister's speech reminded me of a great speech Hugo Chavez gave to the UN last fall:
President Chavez's Speech to the United Nations

Too bad our media only quotes members of the Miami mafia for their Cuba stories and never quotes the real story like this.

[ 23 June 2006: Message edited by: a lonely worker ]


From: Anywhere that annoys neo-lib tools | Registered: Jul 2005  |  IP: Logged

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