Canada's foreign policy in Cuba is based on constructive engagement. According to the Canadian International Development Agency, Cuba's social policies set it apart from many other developing countries. Public investments in education and health, for example, have resulted in social development indicators that meet and even surpass those in some developed countries--that is according to CIDA.
Historically, the Cuban regime has counted on the support of many sectors of the international community. For the world to understand what has been going on in Cuba for over 48 years, certain definitions must be clarified.
Firstly, a government with a totalitarian control on society and individuals is unaccountable by nature.
Secondly, the assumption that human rights are tailored on a cultural basis has served dictators in getting away with human rights violations that are otherwise inadmissible in the so-called western world.
Thirdly, and no less important, is the fact that anti-Americanism has been conveniently exploited by dictators like Fidel Castro, who has capitalized on this sentiment, therefore paralyzing opinion makers and political parties, on the doctrine that whatever goes against the United States has to be automatically supported. Sadly enough, some movements have found an identity based on anti-Americanism, making it difficult for them to empathize with the suffering of countries like Cuba.
Some comparisons between present-day Cuba and that of 50 years ago may be useful in order to clarify certain prejudices. During the Batista dictatorship, there were 11 prisons in Cuba; now there are over 300.
According to a report presented on May 11, 2004, by the illegal Cuban Commission for Human Rights and National Reconciliation, starting in 1956, the total number of prisoners in Cuba was less than 4,000, or around 0.06% of the country's population.
Please note that in May 1955, former dictator Batista signed the general amnesty for political prisoners, including those serving time for killing soldiers, in clear reference to Fidel Castro and his group during the attack of the Moncada Barracks in Santiago de Cuba.
Now it is estimated that there are over 100,000 prisoners in Cuba, by far the highest in the world in terms of percentage, with around 1% of the total population of 11 million. This figure has been neither accepted nor denied by Cuban authorities, who forbid cooperation with the International Red Cross.
According to Dr. Armando Lago, board vice-president of the Free Society Project and Cuba Archive research director, Ph.D., and master in economics from Harvard University, to date over 8,200 cases have been documented of executions, assassinations, and disappearances by the Castro regime. Total deaths from exit attempts by sea, called balseros, are estimated at around 78,000. Within the documented cases are 94 children's deaths, including 22 by firing squad executions, 32 extrajudicial assassinations, and 24 assassinated in exit attempts. There are similar cases of female deaths, totalling 216.
The following are some of the myths about Cuba, which have become deeply rooted in public opinion.
Myth number one, there is a U.S. blockade on Cuba.
In reality, between 2001 and March 2004, under the United States Trade Sanctions Reform and Export Enhancements Act, the value of authorized agricultural food products exported to Cuba was $518,216,553. It is estimated that Cubans in the U.S. send $1 billion U.S. a year in remittances to Cuba. According to the U.S. Department of Commerce, one-third of the island's food and one-third of the island's medicine originates in the United States. The 2006 exports to Cuba totalled $347.8 million U.S.
Myth number two, living conditions of the Cuban populace prior to Castro's arrival to power were appalling.
In reality, Cuba is one of the countries of Latin America where the standard of living of the masses was particularly high; this is according to a Cuban communist leader called Anibal Escalante, in the July 30, 1961, issue of Verde Oliva Magazine.
In health, Cuba 's mortality rate was 5.8 people per 1,000 inhabitants, making it among the lowest in the world, while its infant mortality rate of 36.6 per 1,000 was similarly the lowest in Latin America, far ahead of the second-ranked country.
Cuba ranked second in Latin America in the percentage of its labour force covered by social security insurance against old age, disability, and death, with 62.6% of the workforce insured.
The Cuban republic prior to Castro's revolution provided an eight-hour work day, the right to strike, university autonomy, and had a public space with large numbers of newspapers and radio stations with diverse political and ideological viewpoints.
Today the average salary is $15 Canadian a month, 70% of the population have never known any leader other than Fidel Castro, and 20% of the Cubans live in exile.
Myth number three, illiteracy was extremely high in Cuba until the arrival of Fidel Castro.
In reality, according to a 1953 Cuban census, out of 4,376,529 inhabitants aged 10 years or older, 23.6% were illiterate, a percentage lower than all other Latin American countries except Argentina, Chile, and Costa Rica. Factoring only the population 15 years of age or older, the rate has lowered to 22%.
Myth number seven, Cuba's health care system is universal and egalitarian for all Cubans.
In reality, according to the Pan American Health Organization, the Cuban government currently devotes a smaller percentage of its budget to health care than such regional countries as Nicaragua, Argentina, Venezuela, Chile, and Costa Rica. The Pan American Health Organization finds that Cuba, in terms of per capita expenditures on health care, is behind such regional countries as Argentina, Bahamas, Puerto Rico, Venezuela, Chile, Costa Rica, and Jamaica.
Turning to health care in Cuba, medical apartheid, and health tourism, Cuba's growing health care tourism effort has roused bitter reproach from the nation's critics, who accuse the regime of Fidel Castro of creating an apartheid system of health care in which foreigners and the Cuban party elite get top-class service while average Cubans must make it with dilapidated facilities, outdated equipment, and meagrely stocked pharmacies. These greatly contrast with Cuban elite hospitals promoted by such health tourism enterprises as SERVIMED.
Hilda Molina, one of Cuba 's most noted scientists, founder and former director of Havana's International Center for Neurological Restoration, broke with the regime and resigned from her high-level position, and also as a member of Cuba's National Assembly, to protest the system of medical apartheid.
I cannot read all the report because it is long, but I will focus on some aspects that I would like the subcommittee to know.
You have all the information. I will speak in Spanish and this gentleman will translate the points I will touch upon.
The Chair: Please proceed.
Mr. Asdrubal Caner Camejo (Interpretation): Dear members of this subcommittee, I would like to thank you very much for having me here as a guest to testify. I'm a representative of the Cuban Social Democratic Party, and I have a letter of credentials signed by Mr. Vladimiro Roca.
My party is the party of Vladimiro Roca, who was a well-known prisoner of conscience at one time. As a matter of fact, he was a member of the Group of Four. In relation to this, Prime Minister Jean Chrétien in 1998 requested that he be released. Unfortunately, Fidel Castro did nothing about it until the bitter end.
As social democrats, we would like to work with all Canadian parties in a democratic and peaceful manner. I would like to address four issues concerning Cuba in relation to human rights and the violation of human rights. Following that, I will give you my assessment of the situation.
I will first talk about the day-to-day situation of inmates, and in particular the situation or plight of the prisoners of conscience.
Second, I'll talk about the 29 Cuban journalists who have been imprisoned for no reason whatsoever.
Third, I'll talk about the re-emergence of racial discrimination in Cuba, particularly in relation to the 90,000 black Cubans who are currently imprisoned.
Finally, I'll talk about the health status of 57 prisoners of conscience.
So you have a list. It includes the names of the inmates, the sentences they received, the names of the prisons, and where the prisons are located. All in all, there are 300 prisoners.
Statement by :
Point number two would be that 29 Cuban journalists are incarcerated for no reason.
Cuba continues to be one of the world's leading jailers of journalists, second only to China, with 29 independent journalists currently in prison. Of these, 22 were jailed in a crackdown in March of 2003. Some also have had severe health problems. I bring with me a list of these journalists, whose only crime, so to speak, was to inform the public about the real situation in Cuba.
The repression is not only against journalists but their families as well. The wife of an independent journalist was fired from her job after being declared “politically unreliable”. Yolanda Álvarez, the wife of independent journalist Alejandro Tur, worked as an attendant in the bathrooms of “El Rápido” shopping centre in Cienfuegos. The shopping centre is owned and operated by the government under its corporate name CIMEX.
Now we go on to the Internet, still in point number two.
With less than 2% of its population online, Cuba is one of the most backward countries with respect to the Internet. An investigation carried out by Reporters without Borders in October revealed that the Cuban government uses several techniques to ensure that this medium is not used in a “counter-revolutionary” way.
We'll go on to point number three now, the re-emergence of racial discrimination in Cuba and the 90,000 black Cubans presently in jail.
The Republican era was very difficult for black people in Cuba. Following the infamous American intervention of 1898, a racial discrimination model was established that deeply affects that segment of our population. But this segment of the population continues to be the least prepared and the most vulnerable in Cuba.
In exchange for improving their lives, Fidel Castro wants absolute fidelity and submission from black Cubans. They were the main force of the Cuban army deployed in Angola, Ethiopia, Somalia, Congo, and other parts of Africa. Thousands of black Cubans died in countless wars around the world. They remain the main force of the Cuban army and police force. The regime is using black people in the quick-response brigade against other parts of the population.
The authorities sent hundreds of members of the black police force to Havana to contain the popular people protests in the capital. They are using extreme force against protesters, black and white, including repression against young black people from Havana.
:
Good morning. First of all, I would like to thank the members of the committee for having invited me to take stock of the human rights situation in Cuba.
First, if I may Mr. Chairman, I would like to inform committee members about the witness who preceeded us, Mr. Nelson Taylor Sol of the Cuban Canadian Foundation. Their magazine, which came out last week, published an ad that I will translate for you as follows: “Reward. If you know any Cuban who asked for refuge or who is here as an independent immigrant and is collaborating against the regime of Fidel Castro, please communicate with us. This information is strictly confidential. National Security Agency.”
This represents a monetary reward for the denunciation of Cubans having political opinions contrary to those of the Cuban-Canadian Foundation. This is illegal under Canadian legislation and it is the kind of abuse of human rights that we seek to expose. If the Cuban government were to publish those kinds of ads in Cuban newspapers, I would not be here to testify.
The three sections of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights open up too broad a field for me to try and provide an overview in the few minutes I have been given, particularly as we are talking about one of the most serious of subjects. This should never be taken lightly. Men and women have sacrificed their lives for these rights. Moreover, this is the case for 650,000 Iraqis, thousands of Afghans and thousands of American, European and Canadian soldiers.
Given that today is the 1st of May, International Workers Day, I thought it would be appropriate to focus my comments on the situation of labour law in Cuba. In the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, labour law is dealt with in Article 23 and its four clauses. The first of these subsections reads as follows:
Everyone has the right to work, to free choice of employment, to just and favourable conditions of work and to protection against unemployment.
The Journal de Montréal recently informed us that a Cuban doctor living in Quebec had to drive a taxi because he did not have the right to practice his profession, even though it is highly in demand in our province, a situation that is unfortunately not uncommon and which clearly violates the first subsection of this article. In Cuba, there are also doctors driving taxis but they do so because they prefer the higher wage compared to what they would earn as doctors. They have made the choice, which they have the right to do. Their colleagues practice their profession without difficulty and that is the case for all Cuban workers. No Cuban will be refused access to a position in his own profession on the island.
The crisis in the Cuban sugar industry over the last few years has occurred without a single worker being thrown out on the street or becoming unemployed. On the contrary, every worker has been able to choose between early retirement or paid-retraining in the up and coming sector of their choice, with a job related to their training including a salary that is equal or superior to their original position. This is a social approach to industrial transformation that would be the envy of the wood and asbestos industries or of the manufacturing sectors that are in crisis in Canada.
Eliminating unemployment is one of the fundamental challenges of Cuban employment policies. At the end of 2005, Cuba reached a 1.9% unemployment rate, which means one can say that Cuba is a country with full employment. At the same time, the skilled worker shortage in Canada is increasing at the same rate as tuition fees, guaranteeing the most disadvantaged families sustainable unemployment. In the countries that are geographically and economically closest to Cuba, workers are facing recurring unemployment rates of 20 to 60%.
The second subsection of Article 23 stipulates the following:
Everyone, without any discrimination, has the right to equal pay for equal work.
Cuba is the country that has the highest ratio of elected professional women and female managers. Sixty per cent of students registered in graduate programs are women. The last census before the Cuban Revolution in 1953 showed that only 17% of workers were women; one-third were domestic workers, 6% were technicians or professionals and only 2% were in management.
During the 2000 census, Cuban women represented 43.2% of workers, and two-thirds—66.4% precisely—were in professional and technical positions. Over 30% of Cuban politicians are women. The Cuban government includes six female ministers and almost 40 female deputy ministers, while 46% of the most important government corporations are managed by women. According to Canada's parliamentary website, women represent only 20% of elected officials, at the federal, provincial or territorial levels, a percentage that Cuba went beyond in 1993. As far as pay equity is concerned, this is only a recent achievement in Quebec, after years and years of unending union, political and legal battles, and it remains the subject of difficult struggles in many Canadian businesses.
The third subsection of article 23 reads as follows:
Everyone who works has the right to just and favourable remuneration ensuring for himself and his family an existence worthy of human dignity, and supplemented, if necessary, by other means of social protection.
Cuba considers that productive work with appropriate income is an essential condition for equity and social justice. Between the months of May and December 2005, Cuba granted substantial increases in allowances for recipients of welfare and social assistance, going as far as tripling benefits in some cases.
In 2005, they also began a process to increase the salaries of over two million workers. This measure includes the implementation of new wage scales, the improvement of interchange and function indicators, and it allows for the setting up of an additional payments instrument as recognition of the qualifications and quality of work.
The implementation of this suite of measures has increased the average salary by 282 Cuban pesos from the beginning of 2005, to 399 in June 2006; that is a 40% increase of the average wage over two years, which resulted in an 8% revaluation of the Cuban currency and the purchasing power of this currency.
In addition to these efforts made to improve wages, mention must be made of the subsidies on goods and services which make them available to Cubans for a fraction of their value. Mr. Taylor Sol was speaking earlier on about the fact that the average Cuban wage is $16, but the cost of living is not the same over there. In this way, the kilowatt hour of electricity costs 20 Cuban centavos, that is less than one Canadian cent. The weekly grocery shopping for a family of six, including fish, meat, fruits and vegetables costs two to three Canadian dollars. Also, a single average Cuban salary of 399 pesos will suffice to pay the electrical, telephone, gas and food bills for a family of six people. As for housing, 85% of Cubans are homeowners and therefore have absolutely nothing to pay in this regard. For the others, rent represents less than 10% of incomes. These are privileges Canadian minimum-wage workers would like to have.
I am sure the subcommittee will also be studying the cases of many Latin-American countries where the minimum wage is equal to or less than the Cuban wage, but where goods and services are not subsidized, which sentences a significant portion of the population to extreme poverty.
In her report on human rights in Cuba, the special representative of the United Nations High Commissioner, Christine Chanet, identified the US blockade as the primary holdup of economic social and cultural rights of the Cuban population, but also of civil and political rights.
:
I have nearly finished.
But the United States is not satisfied with this illegal blockade, which has been almost universally condemned by the international community. The achievements of Cuban workers, retired persons and those on social assistance are threatened.
The president, Mr. George W. Bush, has had a de facto plan to annex Cuba approved, which includes in its first version of May 2004, a chapter entitled: Meeting basic human needs in the areas of health, education, housing and human services. It insists on eliminating the Cuban social security system. According to this plan, the Cuban economy and the government's budget after the transition will not be able to maintain the level and the applications for eligibility that the Communist system allowed for. In fact, this would be purely and simply to abolish the socio-economic rights of Cubans.
This brings me to the fourth and final subsection:
Everyone has the right to form and to join trade unions for the protection of his interests.
The right to free unionization is fully protected under Cuban legislation. All Cuban workers have the right to freely join unions and to set up trade union organizations without any preliminary permission being required. Neither the Labour Code in effecting Cuba nor its complimentary legislation establish any restrictions on the creation of unions. The Labour Code states, in its section 14, that Cuban workers have the right to meet, to discuss and to freely express their opinions on all issues and subjects adversely affecting them.
In Cuba, there are 19 national sectoral unions with communal and provincial structures in 169 communities and the 14 provinces of the country. There are over 80,000 union offices or basic unions, through which over half a million union leaders have been elected by secret and direct ballot. The national unions are part of a central union umbrella group, Central Workers Union of Cuba, founded in 1939, that is to say 20 years before the triumph of the Cuban revolution, through the joint wishes of Cuban workers.
Some would argue that these unions are controlled by the government and have no real power. I have been able to personally observe that this is not the case. Two years ago, the Minister of Cuban Tourism, Manuel Marrero Cruz, presented a code of ethics for employees in the tourism sector who were in contact with foreigners.
This code was an attempt to respond to a pressing demand by the Cuban population, exasperated at seeing the corruption that was developing because of the excessive purchasing power of the dollar in a subsidized economy. As soon as it was unveiled, this code of ethics was distributed and discussed by all workers in the tourist sector in their union meetings. It quickly became apparent that the draft code was considered to be too radical by many workers who agreed with the principles of the code, but not with the provisions and with their inflexibility. The unions reported these discussions to the department, the code was immediately suspended and the minister even apologized to the workers through a video that was broadcast by all the unions.
I personally experienced these events thanks to friends working in this area who allowed me to follow the story. Canadian workers would certainly be very happy if their unions were as powerful as the Cuban unions.
:
Good morning, and thank you for inviting me to appear before the committee.
What I'm going to be talking to you about today I learned on the ground. I have been working in Cuba for 14 years, and I work with an organization whose objective is to educate people about peace through friendship based on mutual respect and understanding. It said that if we can build friendship with people from a country that is completely different from our own, world peace is possible. We must establish a dialogue and try to understand each other.
I'm going to try to explain the mindset of the people of Cuba by telling you what I have learned. I will start with a little history and will talk about José Martí, Cuba's national hero, the father of independence, the founder of the Cuban revolutionary party, whose objective was to achieve Cuba's independence and to establish the foundations for a future republic.
He used to say: "I want the first law of our Republic to be respect by the people of Cuba for the absolute dignity of human beings." He united the pro-independent forces to achieve victory against Spain in 1898 and he taught Cubans that success lay in a unified nation.
The young Fidel Castro was very marked by José Martí's thinking and he achieved genuine independence for the country through the triumph of the revolution in 1959. This revolution was carried out by, with and for the people. Since Cuban independence in 1898, the island had been run from Washington, and it belonged to American companies. Today, all of Cuban society is based on the principles of José Martí.
Before the triumph of the revolution, there were a number of parties, but no solution. The Cubans established a single party, one which brought solutions to their problems. There was one party, with one education system, one health care system—all for one people. There is justice and equality for all.
The people of Cuba are rebellious. They have not been ground down. Che Guevera used to say that it was better to die standing than to live on one's knees. In Havana, you can see and read the following: "Mr. Bush, you can kill every last one of us, but you will never bring to us to our knees, the way we were before".
The Cuban people are worthy, courageous and determined to defend to achievements of the revolution, despite the inhuman blockade that has lasted over 48 years, the longest in human history. They are revolutionaries, a people of the 1959 revolution who, after the battle of ideas, brought about a revolution in educatin. As José Marti said: “trenches of stone. At the moment, they are involved in the energy revolution.
Let me turn now to human rights.
The right to life. The infant mortality rate in Cuba is 5.2 per 1,000 live births, which is similar to the rate in Canada. Pregnant women are given special care. The health care system is based on prevention: Cuban children get 13 vaccinations in their first year of life. The life expectancy is 76 for men and 78 for women. Those are the up-to-date figures.
Health care. The health care system is free and universal. It is subsidized by tourism. Tourism is the main industry of Cuba, and it is what makes it possible to achieve these results, together with the political will to do this.
The right to education. About 4% of the population is illiterate and will never be able to learn, because they are not capable of learning. At primary school, there is one teacher for every 20 pupils. One child equals one teacher and one school. Wherever the children live, in the mountains or elsewhere, teachers travel to them, by mule if necessary, but every day children have access to a teacher with their school, solar panel, television set, video and computer.
In high schools, there is one teacher for every 15 students, so that teenagers get more attention and are less likely to drop out. That is enviable, is it not? There is also distance education by television and video so that students get the same education whether they live in the mountains or in the capital. Children who have to move to go to high school receive housing, food, transportation, uniforms and school supplies. Everything is free-of-charge.
Property rights. Agrarian reform was the first reform introduced by Fidel Castro. Property rights for farmers mean that the people who farm the land own it. In Cuba, 80% of the land is owned by farmers, who may or may not be part of cooperatives of various types.
As my colleague was saying, 85% of people own property. The houses are built by the government and are paid for at the rate of a few pesos a month. After 25 years, the people own their house. No one rents their houses.
As regards the right of association, I am going to list a number of associations: the Committees for the Defence of the Revolution, the Federation of Cuban Women, the National Association of Small Agricultural Producers, the José Martí organization of pioneers, for children aged 9 to 14, the Federation of High School Students, for all teenagers up to university age, the Federation of University Students, the Union of Young Communists, the Association of Cuban Workers and the National Union of Writers and Artists of Cuba.
In terms of democratic rights, there are free elections every two and a half years at the municipal level, and every five years at the provincial and national level. With respect to freedom of expression, there are open-line shows on the radio and in provincial and national newspapers. Anything can be called into question, except the socialist nature of the revolution, because that was a decision by the people that was ratified in a referendum in 2002.
When Mr. Carter asked that the Constitution be reopened, 10,000 signatures were tabled in Parliament. Even though they were not notarized or approved by a lawyer, and therefore not legal, the Constitution was reopened; there was a referendum in which over 98% of people over 16 took part. Over 92% of the people said they agreed not only with maintaining the Constitution, but also with the irrevocable nature of socialism in the Constitution. So the socialist nature of the revolution is irrevocable: that decision was made by the people.
As far as freedom of religion goes, there are Catholic and Protestant churches, Santeros, which is the Afro-Cuban religion, Santeria, and even some Jehovah's Witnesses. They are all entitled to all services, as are all Cubans, even if they do not take part in any public activity.
As our colleague said, with respect to the right to work, the unemployment rate is below 2%.
I have presented a brief sketch, but it does give you some idea about contemporary Cuba, and I have seen it for myself in all parts of the country. I have lived with farmers working on coffee, tobacco and sugar cane cooperatives, I've worked with fishers.
I would like to thank you for giving me this opportunity to testify before the committee.
The Caravane d'amitié Québec-Cuba has been in place since 1994 and it is well established within Quebec society. We have friends from all walks of life. There are some volunteers who work for us. Our friends include some Quebec parliamentarians. We also work with organizations such as the U.S. Pastors for Peace and similar organizations in all cities throughout Canada.
Our objective is to develop friendship with Cuba and to respect its sovereignty. We are all opposed to outside intervention in Cuba. This country is entitled to develop its own social system and its own society.
Obviously, my presentation deals with the electoral process and the way Cubans choose their government.
The ability to choose one's government is a human right. I affirm that this important right is respected in Cuba. There is a very full participatory electoral process in place, one which is guaranteed by the Constitution.
There was a referendum on the Constitution establishing the political structure on February 15, 1976, following a massive public consultation process that had begun one year earlier. At this referendum, 99.3% of eligible voters aged 16 and up took part in the referendum, and 98% of them voted for the proposal.
As Colette said earlier, elections are held every five years. The deputies and delegates at the National Assembly are chosen by general secret ballot. Municipal elections are held every two and a half years.
People nominate and select candidates at public meetings held in local constituencies of voters. In over 14,000 constituencies broken down into districts and zones, there are some 25,000 electoral colleges where the voters lists are posted, together with the biography and photo of all the candidates.
Members of the municipal and provincial assemblies are elected from among the constituency delegates, who are put forward and elected by the people in the district. Candidates must get 50% plus one in order to be elected, if not, there is a second round.
The deputies of the National Assembly or Parliament are selected from among members of the provincial assemblies and work with representatives of the scientific and administrative sectors, associations of farmers and intellectuals and public organizations. In Parliament, there are lots of seats set aside for the general public from the municipalities and the districts, but also for representative sectors of the country, such as the unions and others. These institutions are entitled to a certain number of deputies.
Parliament elects the members of the Council State from among its representatives. The Council State elects the President, who is Fidel Castro. The elected officials, including the constituency delegates, members of municipal and provincial assemblies and deputies of the National Assembly all perform their duties without any remuneration. However, those in the most demanding positions as representatives are paid. Generally, people who had professions other than that of politicians earn the same salary they were earning before they became politicians.
Periodically, elected officials must report on their work and their mandate can be revoked by the people who elected them. Consequently, they must appear before those who elected them, and if these people are not satisfied with their work, they can lose their job.
The voting age in Cuba is 16. The names of new voters are automatically added to the electoral register when they reach this age, because it's done using the civil registry, which gives the names of all citizens. Voting is a voluntary, free and secret process. There is no law requiring voters to vote.
In each election held to date, over 90% of eligible voters voted. The votes are counted publicly at the end of the voting period by electoral officials in the presence of voters who volunteered to come in to ensure the transparency of the electoral process. In Cuba, the ballot boxes are watched by children, and no ballot box has ever been stolen.
That completes my presentation.
Thank you.
:
I understand you very well, Ms. St-Hilaire.
When I first went to Cuba in the year 2000, I asked more or less the same questions. When I read the newspapers, I wondered whether it was heaven or hell. This is why I have spent nearly 25% of my time in Cuba over the past seven years. I have lived with the Cuban people, both in Havana and in the other provinces, to find out what was going on inside Cuba at all levels.
I noted that all was not well in Cuba. The country has been economically stifled for 48 years. No other country has ever gone through that. Can you imagine what would happen if, tomorrow morning, the United States refused any trade with Canada and threatened to prosecute any company that trades with Canada? We would be in desperate economic straights. Canada is a wealthy country, whereas Cuba, at the time of the revolution, was a poor country.
Thus, things are not going well. When the Soviet Union, that had been helping Cuba economically, fell apart, the blockade was re-enforced. Let me remind you that you asked me whether we should condemn the blockade. The Canadian government condemns it as almost every country in the world does. Only four UN member-countries support the blockade. Of course, the United States support it, along with Israel, Palaos and the Marshall Islands. The rest of the international community is revolted by this illegal blockade that is often described as attempted genocide.
This is Cuba's real economic situation. Canada and Canadian companies are welcomed to trade with Cuba, for without this, Cubans would be literally starving to death, as was the case in the beginning of what is called the "special period", in 1992, when the Americans strengthened their blockade right after the demise of the Soviet Union.
We hear all kinds of things about Cuba. This is why Cuba-Nouvelles is striving to reveal facts that can be objectively verified. You can verify the figures I quoted. The average Cuban's purchasing power has increased by nearly 50% during the past two years. This is the result of Canada's constructive economic policy and Canada's presence in Cuba.
If the United States' blockade was lifted tomorrow morning, Cuba's standard of living could well become four or five times higher. Trade between Cuba and the United States is very limited. It amounts to approximately US$300 million to US$400 million per year. This is merely a drop in the bucket for a country with a population of nearly 12 million.
This trade is subjected to very difficult conditions. Some products are available in Cuba, but the government, the people and the State of Cuba usually have to purchase such products at twice or three times the normal price. For instance, to purchase a bag of cement whose wholesale price is only a few dollars, it costs up to $10 or $15 to ship it from Europe, and a ship is denied access to American ports for the six months that follow.
Let me conclude by raising a second point regarding political prisoners. Imagine if tomorrow morning Canada found out that Saudi Arabia or the government of Iran or Pakistan were paying Canadians four or five times the minimum wage to help Canada make a peaceful and democratic transition to an Islamic regime because those countries feel that our monarchy is obsolete. I think that the Canadian government would not stand for it.
This is exactly what is happening in Cuba. People caught receiving $200 or $300 a month—I already mentioned the cost of living in Cuba—have been jailed. It was not because of their opinions. Many people who are opposed to the regime in Cuba are free to walk the streets, but those who collaborate with the enemy are jailed.
:
When I listen to these facts, I have the impression that I'm listening to a Cuban radio station. I am from Cuba. I was born in Cuba. I was raised in Cuba. I left my country to go to Jamaica, and from Jamaica I came to Canada.
Cuba was traditionally attracting immigrants from all over the world. My grandparents were immigrants from Jamaica. Not even Haitians want to stay in Cuba now. So obviously we are talking about two different countries. It's like the sun and the moon; it's absolutely....
These facts are provided by the Cuban government, the same government that doesn't accept the existence of political prisoners in Cuba. How do you trust a totalitarian regime to provide reliable information regarding human rights, regarding health care, regarding education?
In Cuba we are indoctrinated in communism. There is no right to choose education. You must study communism whether you like it or not. If you are a Jehovah's Witness, you are not allowed to enter university. When I was in high school, the best student in my class was a Jehovah's Witness, and she was banned from the university. Everyone was very sad for this girl because she was the best student and she was not allowed into university.
Cubans have been persecuted for religious reasons, for political reasons, for ideological reasons, even for thinking differently. The fact that I am in Canada talking about human rights in Cuba makes someone wonder, why is this human rights committee being addressed? Why not talk in Cuba about human rights in Cuba?
I had to come from Cuba to Canada to listen to Canadians who go as tourists to Cuba, who spend 25 days or a year--I don't know how long--when I, myself, as a Cuban, am allowed to go to Cuba for only three weeks. That's the maximum. And most probably, after this meeting I won't be allowed to enter Cuba at all.
So I don't know which country we are talking about here. It makes absolutely no sense.
:
I'll take only one minute. This is a situation we have had for 50 years in Cuba. It's in television, radio, everywhere. I will give you one simple example.
I was doing my PhD in Cuba and was looking for data, for information. I went to every sugar factory in my province, Santiago de Cuba, and in all of the country. When you see the information from the factory, the information of the province, and the national information, it is totally different information. I don't believe in the statistics of the Cuban regime.
Also, the Economic Commission for Latin America, the CEPAL, rejected the information the Cuban regime gave them. They said, that's enough, that's it, because Fidel Castro wanted to change the whole methodology of how to look at economic improvements. For that reason I don't believe in all these statistics.
They say that Cuba is a very free country. My party is a socialist party. We don't want established capitalism in Cuba; we want a Cuba like Canada, with a market economy and social programs. My party, which is looking for a life such as in Canada, is not allowed to participate in elections like other parties in Cuba. There are approximately, at this moment, 450 organizations in Cuba. There are some big parties, such as my party, and there are others, such as the Christian Democratic party, or movement, in Cuba.
The problem is the embargo. The embargo really affected Cuba in the first three years, 1963, 1964, and 1965. It is finished. From that moment on, the system hasn't worked; the governmental property hasn't worked.
In Cuba there is a saying in Spanish: El ojo del amo engorda al caballo....
Mr. Ronald Silvester: The eye of the master fattens up the horse.
Mr. Asdrubal Caner Camejo: There is no owner in Cuba—nobody—who takes care of the property there. The government pays the workers and the workers have work, but it doesn't work.
Why is there an embargo? Cuba has bought from the United States, up to now, $2 billion in product. For what reason does Cuba need to pay $1.7 billion for food that we can produce in Cuba? There is no agriculture in Cuba at the moment.
:
Thank you very much. It's not very often I say to a socialist, good job.
Some hon. members: Oh, oh!
An hon. member: A social democrat.
Mr. Kevin Sorenson: Yes, a social democrat.
You certainly expressed I think what we all recognize. We all recognize that what they have in Cuba is not working. Communism doesn't work. It never has worked. I applaud you for saying that you want a market economy, that you may not want to become a pure socialist country, that capitalism does work. We thank you for that.
You talk about free trade and all those things. We appreciate that. I guess it comes back to what Mr. Cotler says. The agreements Canada has made with Cuba perhaps aren't working to the degree they should.
We're a human rights committee here. We're a subcommittee of the foreign affairs committee, which right now is doing a report on democratic development. I have two questions.
How can Canada move Cuba towards democracy?
Secondly, in 2003 there were measures taken by the previous government in regard to the 75 prisoners who were taken. From what I understand, I don't think there was a lot of satisfaction with what seems to have transpired. What can Canada do specifically for those people who are in prison?
We want to see Cuba take certain measures, but if we bring these human rights issues up, it might push some of the other things away.
My questions are for Mr. Taylor Sol and Mr. Caner Camejo—Mr. Taylor Sol first.
:
Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
I did read the report that you are so blithely referring to left and right. I don't think that everything is black or white. Most organizations that defend human rights talk about political prisoners in Cuba. You do understand that your position contradicts that of others. They are prisoners, but I do not really know what type of prisoners they are.
There is a problem. I agree with the rapporteur's recommendations, but since they date back to 2006, I would like to know if the Cuban government has responded to them. That is my first question.
My second question is for Mr. Leroux. You said it yourself by quoting Ms. Chanet: she talked about not respecting human rights. In her report, she discusses it. Regardless of what it is due to, we agree on the fact that there is a problem with respect to human rights. You cannot deny that.
As members of the subcommittee, we want to find ways of providing our assistance without interfering in Cuban politics, because Cuba is sovereign. Could we go as far as suspending ODA to Cuba until the prisoners have been released? Because there are prisoners. And there are not just five or six, there are many. Maybe there is a plot against Cuba: like the series 24, but set in Cuba—but we have to find a way of proving that.
We are somewhat uncomfortable, because there are people in Cuba telling us that there is a problem, that human rights are not being respected, that there are political or other prisoners, but that there are prisoners, and torture. Moreover, people have told us the opposite. You can tell us something else, but human rights defence groups have told us that there is a problem. So the onus of proof is on you and your organizations are more representative of Canada and Quebec than they are Cuba. I am not in any way diminishing the work that you do—far from it, I value it—but you must understand that we have heard other versions of the situation and that reports like the one prepared by Ms. Chanet are telling us that a problem with human rights exists.
What do you have to say about that?
:
I have never denied that there were problems with human rights in Cuba. Respecting human rights is a problem for all countries in the world, including the United States and Canada. Even Canada was singled out by the Commission on Human Rights. No country is perfect, and that is why we are all working together to try and improve things. Having said that, the notion of political prisoner is not defined in any international covenant. The interpretation of political prisoner is subjective.
I will go back to the absurd example I gave earlier. If Canada were to arrest people funded by the Government of Iran, Pakistan, or Saudi Arabia for having caused a transition from a peaceful democracy to an Islamic republic, how would we deal with those people? Many organizations that defend human rights would describe the people arrested using security certificates as political prisoners. Should other countries then put an end to their economic or government relations with Canada?
There are political prisoners in the United States. People are regularly arrested at demonstrations. In the United States, one prisoner, Mumia Abu-Jamal, has been in prison for over 25 years for his opinions. He is on death row; he is facing the death penalty. None of these so-called political prisoners in Cuba are facing the death penalty. The only cases involving the death penalty in the past 10 years were due to the highjacking of a boat by terrorists, to something tantamount to what occurred on September 11. Indeed, we must determine whether or not these people are political prisoners. That issue is the subject of considerable media hype.
You talked about a plot. Unfortunately, it is not just on the TV series that you see the Government of the United States, the Pentagon, and the CIA put in place policies and wage a psychological war to take economic or political control of a country. Just look at what happened in Chili and in other countries.
The White House website talks about a plan to annex Cuba, which I referred to. The Government of the United States freed up $80 million last year to fund a campaign to tarnish Cuba's reputation and to defame it. It was discovered that Reporters Without Borders, which was long considered an independent and local organization, received money directly from those funds. That is unfortunately the current situation.
:
Yes. This committee, above all other committees, recognizes the atrocities in Iran. We have North Korea and we have other countries where you'd almost ask “What's the use?” at times. You just feel, “What can we do as long as that guy is the leader in North Korea?”—very similar types of feelings to what we have with Iran.
So there's an appeal to do something. I think that's what Mr. Cotler is asking us: let's do something.
What can we do?
A call to genocide is absolutely, without doubt, the most horrific call that any leader can propagate. A leader of a country who is calling for the annihilation of another country, a democratic country, certainly has to be met with the greatest response we can make. But what Mr. Cotler is asking for in this thing is something that is unprecedented here in Canada. From what I have been told, it's an unprecedented movement, asking the International Criminal Court to intervene in this way.
What are the foreign policy consequences to this type of motion? I mean, is it just a win-win situation for Canada, that all of a sudden we're going to call on this extraordinary response, although foreign policy considerations have not been adequately studied?
Do we have a chance of winning? It's nice to lodge a complaint. It's a little protest—well, it's a major protest. It shows that we do not accept and are responding in the most powerful way we know how. But do we have a chance of winning? Again, we don't know whether we have a chance of winning this.
Canada has consistently taken Iran to task on its human rights violations, its misbehaviour in international affairs, and we have done a number of things. We have signed on to a policy of controlled engagement. What does that mean? It means there are only certain things that we at this point are going to talk to Iran about. We still have the door open to speak about nuclear disarmament, and we're doing that. We've consistently spoken out against their threat of nuclear weaponry and going down that path. Their violation of human rights? We've heard and we agree, listening to the people who have come here horrified about what they see happening in Iran.
We still have the ability to speak to Iran about human rights. We have the ability, through this controlled engagement, to discuss with them the torture and murder of Canadians by Iranian officials, and we've seen that with Zahra Kazemi in an Iranian prison.
Some of the other things Canada can't do include that we can't sell anything to Iran that's going to have a military involvement, that is going to be used for aggression or for even defending their own interests. We do not permit opening Iranian consulates here in Canada, a very tough, strict stand saying, “No, you can't have a consulate here, because we totally disagree with your record and what you're doing in Iran.” We say, you can't fly into Canadian airspace; you're not to enter Canadian airspace. All these things, certainly, are a response. We're well-known. The Government of Canada for a long time has stood up to Iran, and we're recognized as standing up to Iran.
Mr. Cotler's motion is for Mr. Ahmadinejad to be prosecuted in the International Criminal Court. The problem is, Israel hasn't signed on, Iran hasn't signed on, India hasn't signed on, the United States hasn't signed on to this agreement, and we're now going to try them in a court under a jurisdiction they have never signed on to. That is problematic. It's their right not to sign the treaty. Are we then going to bind them by the treaty they didn't sign?
Another concern I have is that when we go this route, we're opening the doors right now for every other country, even those that have not signed on to this treaty, to find themselves hauled before this court that they don't recognize and be tried for the human right violations or the crimes that they may be chosen to be charged with.
I agree with the spirit of the motion. We have to do something; we have to do more. But is this the route to go? Is this the route we want to take? At this juncture, I don't think I can vote for this motion, although I'm sitting on this committee, because we recognize that there are major human.... But this isn't the right response.
:
Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
I was simply going to say that I understand that Canada has done everything it can within its powers, in terms of not flying over our airspace, in terms of human rights issues—all of that. Unfortunately, it really doesn't get at the issue. It's good, but it doesn't get at the core.
The world stood by and watched Rwanda—I use it as an example. We knew what was going on. There was all kinds of rhetoric going on in that country about what they intended to do, but radio programs, broadcasting...the world chose not to listen and to call it genocide. Even while it was happening, it didn't happen; we didn't deal with it.
During the Second World War, that was a genocide too; the holocaust is the same thing. You can name it the holocaust or you can name it genocide. The western world knew what was going on there and chose to ignore it.
We're looking at Darfur, but how long has it taken us to deal with Darfur, even? And only now are we beginning. The reality is that when countries start saying things such as “Israel is an illegal state”, or “It's evil and needs to be abolished” or “eradicated from the face of the map”, that incites genocide.
There may not be in the near future the right stars aligned so it actually can happen, or there might be, but the world can't allow for those stars to align and the world needs to deal with them.
The world usually talks through the United Nations as a united body, to say to Iran: “You can't do that. It won't be tolerated. You need to find a different way, if you want to be part of our system, part of the world, or have any respect, or what have you.” But I don't think they care about respect from anyone else at this point, certainly not the current regime.
The other thing is the comment about their not being signatories. I really don't see that as an issue, because Milosevic and his country weren't signatories either but were still prosecuted under the International Criminal Court, when it came to the atrocities in Kosovo and so on. I don't think that being tried under the International Criminal Court is subject to the country's having been a signatory. It's subject to only one rule, and that is, were there human atrocities and/or genocide perpetrated against humanity? That's really the bottom line.
I know that the Americans have not ratified and that there are a number of other countries that have not ratified, but again I go back to the fact that the International Criminal Court is prosecuting people from countries that did not ratify the International Criminal Court's existence.
:
I'll try to clarify a number of things.
I agree with . I would have thought his conclusions might have followed from this premise, his initial premise, that this is the most horrific call that any leader can propagate. I agree with you. In fact, this is the only leader who has consistently.... That's why I gave you background evidence. And since I gave you the background evidence on December 12, regrettably Mr. Ahmadinejad and some of his associates have repeated the call to wipe Israel off the map--with impunity.
Now, you've said that it's an unprecedented move to ask the International Criminal Court to intervene on this. I have to correct you both, if you'll permit me. Number one, Canada supported the reference to the International Criminal Court of atrocities committed by Sudanese officials. Sudan is not a member or state party to the International Criminal Court. So this is not unprecedented, nor is it related to the fact that Iran, for example, may not be a party to the International Criminal Court. Canada supported it. I supported it. I was in the government. I can tell you that was exactly what we did as the government of the time, which I suspect your government would have done as well, namely to call on the UN Security Council to refer the matter to the International Criminal Court.
mentioned properly formed policy considerations. My answer to that is, what message are we sending if we say that you can advocate genocide with impunity? What kind of human rights, foreign policy, international law implication is that? Mr. Sorenson also spoke to the issue of the development of nuclear weapons by Iran. I'm trying to make the connection here. At the UN we have taken the position--and indeed the UN has taken the position--in fact to pass resolutions calling upon Iran to stop the enrichment of nuclear weapons.... Iran has said it will use these nuclear weapons to “eliminate” Israel, in their words, “in one single storm”. We have to say to the UN that it's not only the enrichment of nuclear weapons, it's the genocidal intent that is linked--by their own words--to the use of nuclear weapons.
Finally, you mentioned speaking about Iran in other contexts and forums. This doesn't preclude our speaking to Iran about anything else. But if we can't speak about enforcing the genocide convention, if we can't, at a very minimum, refer the matter to the UN to consider it.... I mean, this is a minimalist motion that we are speaking to.
I want to get to Denise's comments. She's correct that it's a matter of style. Let's put it this way, I accept her friendly amendment that would state “Therefore, it is recommended that”, in the fourth line.... After the words “for the prevention and suppression of the public and direct incitement to commit to genocide”, I would add the words “by senior Iranian government officials”. It's in the preamble and it was intended to be incorporated in this specific recommendation. I accept the friendly amendment that it would read better by putting, in both number one and line two of number two, the same words, “by senior government officials” after “genocidal incitement”.
As to the matter of investigation of prosecution, she is correct as well. I did not intend to suggest that we should necessarily prosecute or that we don't need to investigate in order to prosecute. I'm saying that we refer the matter to the UN Security Council and they make that determination. In other words, it's a reference where, as with Sudan, they refer the matter to the International Criminal Court for investigation and prosecution. Those are the words. The International Criminal Court will make that determination.
I'm basically asking for a very minimalist thing. Let's just send this to the UN. Let the appropriate agencies of the UN discuss this. Let the matter be before the UN. Let the matter of incitement to genocide be before the UN. I would not want, in 2007, that we did not at the very least recommend that the incitement to genocide be discussed by the UN. They determine whether it should go to the International Criminal Court for investigation and prosecution.
I'm not recommending that Ahmadinejad be prosecuted; I'm recommending that the UN consider it and make that determination. It's so minimalist...you can't get more minimalist.