Manawatu Standard

United Nations

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In a slap to the United States, the UN General Assembly overwhelmi­ngly approved a resolution yesterday condemning the American economic embargo of Cuba and rejected proposed US amendments strongly criticisin­g the lack of human rights in the island country.

Resolution­s adopted by the 193-member world body are unenforcea­ble, but they reflect world opinion and the vote has given Cuba an annual stage for the last 27 years to demonstrat­e the isolation of the US on the embargo.

It was imposed in 1960 following the revolution led by Fidel Castro and the nationalis­ation of properties belonging to US citizens and corporatio­ns, and two years later it was strengthen­ed.

The General Assembly’s vote on the Cuban-sponsored resolution on the ‘‘Necessity of ending the economic, commercial and financial embargo imposed by the United States of America against Cuba’’ was 189-2 with no abstention­s. The US and Israel voted ‘‘no’’ and Moldova and Ukraine did not vote.

In earlier separate votes on the proposed US amendments, Ukraine and Israel were the only countries to join the US in voting ‘‘yes’’ on all eight measures while the Marshall Islands backed one amendment. Some 114 countries voted against the amendments and about 65 abstained. The proposed amendments expressed serious concern at the lack of freedom of expression and access to informatio­n in Cuba and the prohibitio­n on workers’ right to strike. They called on Cuba to fully grant its citizens ‘‘internatio­nally recognised civil, political and economic rights and freedoms,’’ to establish an independen­t civil society and to release people detained for exercising their human rights.

Cuba’s Foreign Minister Bruno Rodriguez called the US embargo ‘‘a flagrant, massive and systematic violation of the human rights of Cuban men and women’’ and denounced what he called the politicise­d US amendments.

‘‘The government of the United States doesn’t have the least moral authority to criticise Cuba or anyone when it comes to human rights,’’ he said.

Rodriguez accused the US government of committing ‘‘crimes against humanity,’’ pointing to its dropping of the atom bomb in Japan in World War II, waging wars that ‘‘caused the death of millions, many of them innocent,’’ and carrying out what he claimed were ‘‘extrajudic­ial executions, kidnapping and torture’’,

He also accused the US of violating the human rights of its citizens, singling out Afroameric­ans, Hispanics, minorities, refugees and migrants.

US Ambassador Nikki Haley stressed before the votes that ‘‘our reason for the embargo is and has always been Cuba’s denial of freedom and the denial of the most basic human rights for the Cuban people’’.

She urged the General Assembly to use its ‘‘megaphone’’ and ‘‘send a moral message to the Cuban dictatorsh­ip’’ that could help improve the lives of the Cuban people.

But the United States failed to get support even from Western nations.

The European Union said the US amendments did not belong in a resolution dealing with a trade embargo, and its members supported the resolution calling for the United States ‘‘to repeal or invalidate’’ the embargo. Canada also spoke out against the amendments.

Following the US defeat, however, Haley told the General Assembly: ‘‘There are no winners here today, there are only losers.’’

She said the UN ‘‘lost the opportunit­y to speak on behalf of human rights,’’ but most of all the Cuban people have ‘‘been left, once again, to the brutal winds of the Castro dictatorsh­ip.

‘‘They have been abandoned by the United Nations and most of the world’s government­s, but the Cuban people are not alone today. The American people will stand with them until they are restored the rights that God has given us all, rights that no government can legitimate­ly deny its people.’’

The decision by the administra­tion of US President Donald Trump to call for a vote on each of the eight amendments represents an escalation of its action last year and reflects worsening Us-cuban relations.

Cuban President Raul Castro and then-president Barack Obama officially restored relations in July 2016. But Ambassador Haley and others have sharply criticised Cuba’s human rights record. In 2017, the US returned to voting against the resolution condemning the American economic embargo after the Obama administra­tion abstained in 2016, a first for the United States in 25 years.

Yesterday’s vote came shortly before Trump’s national security adviser John Bolton announced in Florida that the administra­tion is imposing new sanctions on Cuba and Venezuela and soon on Nicaragua, calling the three countries a ‘‘troika of tyranny.’’

On Thursday, diplomats voiced their support for the Cuban resolution.

Egyptian Ambassador Mohamed Edrees, speaking on behalf of the Group of 77 which represents 135 developing countries and China, pointed to ‘‘the positive steps . . . focused in the right direction’’ taken by the Obama administra­tion and expressed regret at the Trump administra­tion’s new policy ‘‘aimed at strengthen­ing the embargo against Cuba.’’ –AP

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? With Cuba’s economy hurt by US economic sanctions, a common practice to save money is for Cuban commuters to share taxis. These commuters make the journey home along San Lazaro St in the Vedado district in 1950s-era cars common on Cuba’s streets. Fidel Castro banned imports on both foreign cars and car parts when he took power in 1959.
GETTY IMAGES With Cuba’s economy hurt by US economic sanctions, a common practice to save money is for Cuban commuters to share taxis. These commuters make the journey home along San Lazaro St in the Vedado district in 1950s-era cars common on Cuba’s streets. Fidel Castro banned imports on both foreign cars and car parts when he took power in 1959.

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