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Mr. President:
We are living a decisive moment in the history
of humankind. The threats looming over the
world put the very existence of the human
species at risk.
The promotion of peace, solidarity, social
justice and sustainable development is the only
WAY to ensure the future. The prevailing world
order, unjust and unsustainable, must be
replaced by a new system that is truly
democratic and equitable, based on respect for
International Law and on the principles of
solidarity and justice, putting an end to the
inequalities and exclusion to which the great
majorities of the population of our planet have
been condemned.
There are no alternatives. Those responsible
for this state of affairs, the industrialized
nations and, in particular, the sole superpower,
have to accept their responsibilities. Fabulous
fortunes cannot continue to be wasted while
millions of human beings are starving and dying
of curable diseases. It is not possible to keep
on polluting the air and poisoning the oceans;
this destroys the living conditions of our
future generations. Neither the peoples nor the
planet itself will permit this without great
social upheaval and extremely serious natural
disasters.
Mr. President:
The wars of conquest, the aggression and illegal
occupation of countries, military intervention
and the bombing of innocent civilians, the
unbridled arms race, the pillage and usurping of
the Third World’s natural resources and the
imperial offensive to crush the resistance of
the peoples who are defending their rights,
constitute the greatest and most serious threats
to peace and international security.
Concepts such as limitation of sovereignty,
pre-emptive war or regime change, are an
expression of the desire to mutilate the
independence of our countries.
The so-called war on terrorism or the false
promotion of their freedoms, are an excuse for
aggression and military occupation, for torture,
arbitrary arrests and the denial of the right of
self-determination of peoples, for unfair
blockades and unilaterally imposed sanctions,
for the imposition of political, economic and
social models that facilitate imperial
domination, in open disdain for history,
cultures and the sovereign will of the peoples.
The gap between the rich and the poor widens
with every passing day. The very modest
Millennium Development Goals constitute an
unreachable dream for the vast majority.
While a trillion of dollars is spent on weapons
in the world, more than 850 million human beings
are starving; a 1.1 billion people don’t have
access to drinking water, 2.6 billion lack
sewage services and more than 800 million are
illiterate.
More than 640 million children lack adequate
housing, 115 million do not attend primary
school and 10 million die before the age of
five, in most cases as the result of diseases
that can be cured.
The populations of the South are suffering with
increasing frequency from natural disasters,
whose consequences have been aggravated by
climate change. Haiti, Jamaica, Cuba and other
Caribbean countries are examples of that. Let
us make a plea for solidarity especially for our
sister country of Haiti as it faces its dramatic
situation.
The rise in oil prices is the result of
irrational consumption, strong speculation and
imperial war adventures. The desperate search
for new sources of energy has pushed the
criminal strategy driven by the United States
government to transform grains and cereals into
fuel.
Mr. President:
For a large part of the Non-Aligned countries,
the situation is becoming unsustainable. Our
nations have paid, and they will continue to pay
the cost and the consequences of the
irrationality, wastefulness and speculation of a
few countries in the industrialized North who
are responsible for the world food crisis. They
imposed trade liberalization and the financial
prescriptions of structural adjustment on the
developing countries. They caused the ruin of
many small producers; they denied, and in some
cases destroyed, emerging agricultural
development in the countries of the South,
turning them into net food importing countries.
They are the ones who maintain obscene
agricultural subsidies, while they force their
rules on international trade. They set prices,
monopolize technologies, impose unfair
certifications and manipulate the distribution
channels, the financing sources and trade. They
control transportation, scientific research,
genetic banks and the production of fertilizers
and pesticides.
Mr. President:
We have not come here to complain. We have
come, on behalf of the Movement of Non-Aligned
countries, to demand and defend the vindication
of thousands of millions of human beings who
claim justice and their rights.
The formula is not difficult nor does it require
great sacrifices. All we need is the necessary
political will, less egotism and the objective
understanding that if we do not act today, the
consequences could be apocalyptic and would
affect the rich and poor alike. For this
reason, Cuba once again calls on the governments
of the developed countries, on behalf of the
Movement of Non-Aligned countries, to honor
their commitments and, in particular, Cuba urges
them to:
·
Put an end to the wars of occupation and to the
plunder of the resources of the Third World
countries and to free up at least a part of
their millions in military spending to direct
those resources towards international assistance
for the benefit of sustainable development.
·
Cancel the foreign debt of developing countries
since it has been already paid more than once,
and with this, additional resources would be
released that could be channeled to economic
development and social programs.
·
Honor the commitment of directing at least 0.7%
of the Gross Domestic Product for Official
Development Assistance, unconditionally, so that
the South countries would be able to use those
resources for their national priorities and
promote access of poor countries to substantial
sums of fresh financing.
·
Direct one-fourth of the money that is
squandered each year on commercial advertising
to food production; this would free up almost
250 billion additional dollars to fight hunger
and malnutrition.
·
Direct the money being used for the North’s
agricultural subsidies to agricultural
development in the South. By doing this, our
countries would have about a billion dollars per
day available to invest in food production.
·
Comply with the Kyoto Protocol commitments and
set commitments to reduce emissions more
generously starting in 2012, without wanting to
increase restrictions for countries that, even
today, maintain per capita emission levels that
are much lower than those of the North
countries’.
·
Promote the access of the Third World to
technologies and support the training of their
human resources. Today, in contrast, qualified
personnel from the South are subjected to unfair
competition and incentives presented by
discriminatory and selective migratory policies
applied by the United States and Europe.
·
And something that is today more urgent than
ever, the establishment of a democratic and
equitable international order, and a fair and
transparent trading system where all States will
participate, in sovereignty, in the decisions
that affect them.
Moreover, it is our deepest belief that
solidarity between peoples and governments is
possible. In Latin America and the Caribbean,
ALBA and PETROCARIBE have demonstrated this.
Mr. President:
The Movement of Non-Aligned Countries has
remained faithful to its founding principles.
We support the cause of the Palestinian people
and their inalienable right to
self-determination in an independent and
sovereign State, with its capital in East
Jerusalem.
We support the cause of all those other peoples
whose sovereignty and territorial integrity is
being threatened, like Venezuela and Bolivia,
and we endorse the right of Puerto Rico to be
independent.
We condemn the imposition of unilateral coercive
measures in violation of International Law, and
attempts to implant a single model for a
political, economic and social system. We
object to the negative practices of certifying
countries according to the patterns and
interests of the powerful. We strongly oppose
political manipulation and the application of
double standards in the matter of human rights,
and we reject the selective imposition of
politically motivated resolutions against the
member countries of the Movement.
The establishment of the Human Rights Council
gives us the opportunity to open up a new era in
the promotion and protection of all human rights
for all, on the basis of international
cooperation and constructive dialogue. Those who
caused the demise of the old Human Rights
Commission are now trying to disqualify the
Council because they have not been able to bend
it to serve their own self interests. They
refuse to participate in its work to escape the
scrutiny of the international community in the
framework of the Universal Periodic Review
Mechanism.
The legitimacy of the Council does not depend on
the perception that the Empire has about its
work, but on its capacity to discharge its
mandate with the strictest adherence to the
principles of universality, objectivity,
impartiality and non selectivity in the
treatment of human rights issues.
The Movement of Non-Aligned Countries will
continue to defend the interests of the Third
World and promote the building of a world which
is more just, more democratic and with more
solidarity.
Mr. President:
Cuba has had to pay a very high price for the
defense of its independence and sovereignty.
The heroic people of Cuba have endured the
longest and cruelest blockade in history,
imposed by the most powerful nation on Earth.
Despite the fact that this Assembly has
repeatedly and resoundingly pronounced itself in
favor of ending this genocidal policy, the
United States government has not only ignored
the will of the international community, but in
marked disregard of the same, has gradually
intensified its economic war against Cuba.
Never has the foreign policy against a country
been armed with such a broad and sophisticated
arsenal of aggressive measures in the political,
economic, cultural, diplomatic, military,
psychological and ideological domain.
Cuba has just been lashed by two intense
hurricanes which have devastated its agriculture
and seriously affected part of its
infrastructure and damaged or destroyed more
than 400,000 homes.
Allow me to take advantage of this opportunity,
on behalf of the Cuban government and people, to
thank all those countries, organizations and
persons who in one way or another have honestly
and sincerely contributed with resources or
moral support to the reconstruction efforts
undertaken by my country.
That stands in contrast with the position of the
United States government which continues to
ruthlessly apply their blockade.
Cuba has asked for no gifts from the United
States government. It has simply asked and
asked again that it be allowed to purchase in
the United States the materials that are
indispensable for the reconstruction of homes
and power grid and that US companies be
authorized to grant Cuba private commercial
credits to buy food. The answer has been
negative, and it has been accompanied with an
attempt to manipulate information in such a
manner that the government of the United States
seems to be concerned for the wellbeing of the
Cuban people while the government of Cuba is
perceived to be turning down their offer.
If the United States were really so concerned
for the Cuban people, the only moral and ethical
behavior would be to lift the blockade imposed
on Cuba for the last five decades, in violation
of the most elemental rules of International Law
and the Charter of the United Nations .
This irrational policy has a clear aim: to
destroy the process of profound revolutionary
transformations undertaken by the Cuban people
from 1959, in other words, trampling on its
right to self-determination, wresting away its
freedom and its political, economic and social
conquests and plunging it backwards to its
former neocolonial status.
The Bush administration intends to justify the
intensification of its policy against Cuba by
turning once more to fraud and deceit, with the
cynicism and hypocrisy that characterizes it.
Its determination to dominate and re-colonize
Cuba is being presented, no less, like an
endeavor to liberate and democratize.
Who, other than its accomplices, recognizes that
the United States government has any authority
in this world in the matter of democracy and
human rights? What authority would such a
government claim, one that hunts down and
cruelly mistreats the illegal migrants at its
southern border, that legalizes the use of
torture and keeps in concentration camps, such
as the one installed in the territory illegally
occupied by the U.S. base at Guantánamo, people
who have not been proved of or even charged with
any crime?
What respect is due to a government that attacks
the sovereignty of other States using the excuse
of the fight against terrorism, while at the
same time guaranteeing impunity to anti-Cuban
terrorists?
What kind of justice can be promoted by an
administration that illegally keeps imprisoned
five Cuban patriots who were only seeking
information to prevent the actions of the
terrorist groups operating against Cuba from the
United States?
Mr. President:
Cuba appreciates the solidarity which it has
received from this General Assembly in its fight
against the blockade and the aggressions which
it has had to confront for almost five decades.
Cuba reaffirms its unyielding decision to defend
its sovereignty and independence.
Cuba reaffirms its will to carry on, together
with members of the Movement for Non-Aligned
Countries, in the battle for a better world,
where the rights of all peoples for justice and
development are respected.
To conclude I would like to recall the words of
the Commander in Chief of the Cuban Revolution,
comrade Fidel Castro Ruz: “A world without
hunger is possible (…) A just world is
possible. A new world, which our species
eminently deserves, is possible and will become
reality”.
Thank you very much. |