Friday, December 9, 2022

International Human Rights Day: Recovering Cuba's Pre-Castro human rights legacy

Over the past 20 years, I witnessed how Cuban diplomats undermined international human rights standards, first at the United Nations Human Rights Commission and later at the UN Human Rights Council.

 Artists were arrested in Cuba in 2018 for protesting Decree 349, a law that eliminated the few artistic freedoms remaining there.

Prisoner of conscience Eduardo Cardet spent two years and 10 months in prison for speaking critically of Castro’s legacy. The sentence ended on September 30, 2019.

There are over a thousand political prisoners in Cuba today.

Luis Robles and Luis Manuel Otero are prisoners of conscience

On December 2, 2022 two prisoners of conscience observed their second birthdays behind bars. Luis Robles turned 30 years old, and was behind bars for holding up a sign silently in a public space that read " “Freedom. No more repression. #free-Denis [Solís].” He was arrested and jailed on December 20, 2020, and on March 28, 2022 was sentenced to five years in prison

Luis Manuel Otero Alcántara turned 35 years old. He was arrested and jailed on July 11, 2021 when he announced that he was heading out to join the mass protests that broke out across the island. He was also sentenced to five years in prison on June 24, 2022.

Worse yet, the penal code in Cuba on December 1, 2022 became still more draconian. Amnesty International on December 2nd reported on its severity calling it "a chilling prospect for 2023," highlighting the expansion of the death penalty to 23 crimes, and punishing expression for even longer prison sentences.

It was not always this way.

Seventy four years ago, a democratic Cuba helped draft the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and establish the UN Human Rights Commission.

Cuba’s last democratic president, Carlos Prio Socarras, was elected in free and fair elections and assumed office on Oct. 10, 1948. President Prio respected human rights, and this was reflected by the actions taken by his diplomats at the founding of the UN.

Cuba, Panama, and Chile were the first three countries to submit full drafts of human rights charters to the Commission. Latin American delegations, especially Mexico, Cuba, and Chile inserted language about the right to justice into the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, in what would become Article 8.

Guy Pérez-Cisneros (center) &  Ernesto Dihigo (right) in Palace of Chaillot, París, December 1948.

Cuban delegate Guy Pérez-Cisneros addressed the UN General Assembly on Dec. 10, 1948 proposing to vote for the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. The Cuban Ambassador celebrated that it was his colleague who submitted the first draft, that the final document condemned racism and sexism, and also addressed the importance of the rule of law:

"Cuba could not fail to participate in the choir of nations that wish to celebrate the Universal Declaration of the Rights of Man. We feel great pride that the first, very modest draft officially submitted to serve as the basis for the Universal Declaration of the Rights of Man was written by Dr. Ernesto Díhigo, an eminent professor at the University of Havana and a member of the Cuban delegation." ...

“My delegation had the honor of inspiring the final text, which finds it essential that the rights of man be protected by the rule of law, so that man will not be compelled to exercise the extreme recourse of rebellion against tyranny and oppression.”

This democratic Cuba was overthrown 70 years ago on March 10, 1952 by Fulgencio Batista and hopes of a democratic restoration frustrated by the Castro brothers in 1959.

Guy Pérez-Cisneros died of a stroke in 1953.

Ernesto Dihigo, like Pérez-Cisneros, left the diplomatic corps following the 1952 coup, but returned as Cuba’s Ambassador to the United States in January of 1959 retiring in 1960. He left Cuba in 1989 and died in Miami in 1991.

The Center for a Free Cuba will share this history on December 10, 2022 at 12 noon to remind their international community that civil and political rights are an intrinsic part of a shared Cuban heritage that in 1948 made world history and that the Castro regime has spent 63 years trying to erase.

The event will be held in English. You can RSVP here.

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