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Cuba signs UN rights pact
29/02/2008 16:01  - (SA)  

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  • United Nations - Cuba signed two UN human rights pacts on Thursday that long-time President Fidel Castro - replaced by his brother just four days ago - had refused to endorse for more than three decades.

    But the communist-run island's foreign minister said after signing the documents at UN headquarters in New York that Havana still shared the reservations expressed by Castro about the pacts and would formally record them in future.

    Foreign Minister Felipe Perez Roque signed the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights.

    He also said that Cuba would open its doors in early 2009 to regular international scrutiny by the recently created UN Human Rights Council.

    Cuba refused visits by a special reporter appointed by the council's predecessor, the UN Human Rights Commission, which Havana said was manipulated by the US.

    In June, the Geneva-based council dropped Cuba from a list of special investigatory mandates for countries where human rights records are of particular concern, in a move criticised by the US and Canada.

    Perez Roque said on Thursday the decision to sign "has been taken now that the selective and unjust mandate against Cuba imposed by the brutal pressure and blackmail carried out by the US ... has been clearly defeated".

    He called this "a historic victory for the Cuban people," adding that the signature was "a sovereign decision of the Cuban government."

    In Havana, a European diplomat called the signing "a first step in the right direction" by the new government headed by Castro's brother Raul and hoped it would be followed up by the freeing of some jailed dissidents.

    Castro's objections

    Cuba is a one-party state which critics say has imprisoned more than 200 political prisoners.

    Cuba says it holds no political prisoners and labels all dissidents as "mercenaries" on the payroll of the US government.

    The UN covenant on civil and political rights enshrines freedom of opinion and association and the right to vote in elections but does not specifically say people have a right to live in a multi-party democracy.

    When Cuba announced it would sign the pacts, Raul Castro was already governing on behalf of his ailing brother, who was still nominally president.

    Two days later, Fidel Castro reprinted objections he had made in 2001.

    He said the political rights pact could be used as an instrument against Cuba by "imperialism", while two articles in the economic, social and cultural accord were unacceptable.

    The first, establishing the right of workers to have independent trade unions, was fit only for capitalist countries, he said, while the second, on education, would open the door to its privatisation.

    On Thursday, Perez Roque said the Cuban government "shares totally the point of view expressed by ... Fidel Castro", but that this did not contradict the decision to sign.

     
     



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