U.N. Commission Urges Cuba to Accept Envoy's Visit
By Richard Waddington
Reuters
GENEVA, April 17 -- The United Nations' top human rights body kept up
the pressure on Cuba over its rights record today by urging the communist
state to
accept a visit by a U.N. envoy to probe alleged abuses.
But the 53-state Human Rights Commission spurned a tougher resolution
from Costa Rica, backed by Washington and the European Union, demanding
freedom for
about 75 dissidents recently given lengthy jail terms.
Presented by four Latin American countries -- Peru, Nicaragua, Costa
Rica and Uruguay -- the approved text merely called on Cuba to accept the
commission's
decision last year that the envoy should visit.
Cuba has so far refused to let French magistrate Christine Chanet into
the country because it says the U.N. should focus instead on the U.S. Guantanamo
naval
base, where Washington is holding terrorist suspects. The United States,
welcoming the resolution, said Cuba should be denied a seat next year on
the commission,
saying that no state should sit on the body if it "purposely and consistently
undermines the spirit and purpose of the Commission."
The White House statement stressed a multilateral U.S. approach. "We
will work with friends and allies to find new ways to effect a peaceful
democratic transition in
Cuba," it said.
Mexico, which voted in favor of the resolution, called it a "procedural"
measure aimed only at winning cooperation from Cuba, where Fidel Castro
has run a
one-party state for more than 40 years.
"The Mexican vote will be consistent with its principles not to condemn
or to criticize Cuba," said Mariclaire Acosta, Mexico's deputy minister
for human rights and
democracy.
But Cuba, which sees the vote as interference in its domestic affairs,
lashed out at the four Latin American countries behind the resolution,
calling them "disgusting
lackeys" who had bowed to "shameful" pressure from Washington.
"The sole object has been to concoct a pretext to justify the genocidal
blockade and policies of aggression that the United States has practiced
for 40 years,"
ambassador Jorge Ivan Mora Godoy told the commission.
Human rights groups said the U.N. resolution was too mild because it
overlooked the recent arrests of dissidents. The crackdown has brought
widespread
international condemnations.
"It is a completely inadequate resolution. It has no teeth and does
not reflect the recent crackdown, the most serious set back in decades
in Cuba in terms of rights
abuses," said Jose Miguel Vivanco, Human Rights Watch director for
the Americas.
Votes on Cuba are traditionally among the most politically charged at
the annual meetings of the 53-state commission, with Latin American countries,
even those
most closely aligned with Washington, feeling that they have to tread
carefully.
Argentina and Brazil both abstained, while Venezuela joined Cuba in voting against the motion. It was approved by 24 votes to 20, with nine abstentions.
The decision came only after the defeat of the Costa Rican amendment
condemning Cuba for sentencing dissidents to up to 28 years in prison.
The commission also
rejected a Cuban draft attacking the U.S. economic embargo.
© 2003