US
Hypocritical Lectures to Cuba
By Marjorie
Cohn
March 20,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- In advance of President Barack Obama’s
historic visit to Cuba on March 20, there is
speculation about whether he can pressure Cuba to
improve its human rights. But a comparison of Cuba’s
human rights record with that of the United States
shows that the US should be taking lessons from
Cuba.
The
Universal Declaration of Human Rights contains
two different categories of human rights – civil and
political rights on the one hand; and economic,
social and cultural rights on the other.
Civil and
political rights include the rights to life, free
expression, freedom of religion, fair trial,
self-determination; and to be free from torture,
cruel treatment, and arbitrary detention.
Economic,
social and cultural rights comprise the rights to
education, healthcare, social security, unemployment
insurance, paid maternity leave, equal pay for equal
work, reduction of infant mortality; prevention,
treatment and control of diseases; and to form and
join unions and strike.
These human
rights are enshrined in two treaties – the
International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights
(ICCPR) and the
International Covenant on Economic, Social and
Cultural Rights (ICESCR). The United States has
ratified the ICCPR.
But the US
refuses to ratify the ICESCR. Since the Reagan
administration, it has been US policy to define
human rights only as civil and political rights.
Economic, social and cultural rights are dismissed
as akin to social welfare, or socialism.
The US
government criticizes civil and political rights in
Cuba while disregarding Cubans’ superior access to
universal housing, health care, education, and its
guarantee of paid maternity leave and equal pay
rates.
Meanwhile,
the US government has committed serious human rights
violations on Cuban soil, including torture, cruel
treatment, and arbitrary detention at Guantanamo.
And since 1960, the United States has expressly
interfered with Cuba’s economic rights and its right
to self-determination through the economic embargo.
The US
embargo of Cuba, now a blockade, was initiated by
President Dwight D. Eisenhower during the Cold War
in response to a 1960 memo written by a senior State
Department official. The memo proposed “a line of
action that makes the greatest inroads in denying
money and supplies to Cuba, to decrease monetary and
real wages, to bring about hunger, desperation and
the overthrow of the [Castro] government.”
That goal
has failed, but the punishing blockade has made life
difficult in Cuba. In spite of that inhumane effort,
however, Cuba guarantees its people a remarkable
panoply of human rights.
Healthcare
Unlike in
the United States, healthcare is considered a right
in Cuba. Universal healthcare is free to all. Cuba
has the highest ratio of doctors to patients in the
world at 6.7 per 1,000 people. The 2014 infant
mortality rate was 4.2 per 1,000 live births – one
of the lowest in the world.
Healthcare
in Cuba emphasizes prevention, rather than relying
only on medicine, partly due to the limited access
to medicines occasioned by the US blockade. In 2014,
the Lancet Journal said, “If the accomplishments of
Cuba could be reproduced across a broad range of
poor and middle-income countries the health of the
world’s population would be transformed.” Cuba has
developed pioneering medicines to treat and prevent
lung cancer, and prevent diabetic amputations.
Because of the blockade, however, we in the United
States cannot take advantage of them.
Education
Free
education is a universal right up to and including
higher education. Cuba spends a larger proportion of
its GDP on education than any other country in the
world. “Mobile teachers” are deployed to homes if
children are unable to attend school. Many schools
provide free morning and after-school care for
working parents who have no extended family. It is
free to train to be a doctor in Cuba. There are 22
medical schools in Cuba, up from only 3 in 1959
before the Cuban Revolution.
Elections
Elections
to Cuba’s national parliament (the National
Assembly) take place every five years and elections
to regional Municipal Assemblies every 2.5 years.
Delegates to the National Assembly then elect the
Council of State, which in turn appoints the Council
of Ministers from which the President is elected.
As of 2018
(the date of the next general election in Cuba),
there will be a limit of no more than two five-year
terms for all senior elected positions, including
the President. Anyone can be nominated to be a
candidate. It is not required that one be a member
of the Communist Party (CP). No money can be spent
promoting candidates and no political parties
(including the CP) are permitted to campaign during
elections. Military personnel are not on duty at
polling stations; school children guard the ballot
boxes.
Labor
Rights
Cuban law
guarantees the right to voluntarily form and join
trade unions. Unions are legally independent and
financially autonomous, independent of the CP and
the state, funded by members’ subscriptions.
Workers’ rights protected by unions include a
written contract, a 40-44-hour week, and 30 days’
paid annual leave in the state sector.
Unions have
the right to stop work they consider dangerous. They
have the right to participate in company management,
to receive management information, to office space
and materials, and to facility time for
representatives. Union agreement is required for
lay-offs, changes in patterns of working hours,
overtime, and the annual safety report. Unions also
have a political role in Cuba and have a
constitutional right to be consulted about
employment law. They also have the right to propose
new laws to the National Assembly.
Women
Women make
up the majority of Cuban judges, attorneys, lawyers,
scientists, technical workers, public health workers
and professionals. Cuba is ranked first in Save the
Children’s ‘Lesser Developed Countries’ Mother’s
Index. With over 48% women MPs, Cuba has the third
highest percentage of female parliamentarians in the
world. Women receive 9 months of full salary during
paid maternity leave, followed by 3 months at 75% of
full salary. The government subsidizes abortion and
family planning, places a high value on pre-natal
care, and offers ‘maternity housing’ to women before
giving birth.
Life
Expectancy
In 2013,
the World Health Organization listed life expectancy
for women in Cuba at 80; the figure was 77 for men.
The probability of dying between ages 15 and 60
years per 1,000 people in the population was 115 for
men and 73 for women in Cuba.
During the
same period, life expectancy for women in the United
States was 81 for women and 76 for men. The
probability of dying between 15 and 60 per 1,000
people was 128 for men and 76 for women in the
United States.
Death
Penalty
A study by
Cornell Law School found no one under sentence of
death in Cuba and no one on death row in October
2015. On December 28, 2010, Cuba’s Supreme Court
commuted the death sentence of Cuba’s last remaining
death row inmate, a Cuban-American convicted of a
murder carried out during a 1994 terrorist invasion
of the island. No new death sentences are known to
have been imposed since that time.
By
contrast, as of January 1, 2016, 2,949 people were
on death row in state facilities in the United
States. And 62 were on federal death row as of March
16, 2016, according to Death Penalty Information.
Sustainable
Development
In 2006,
the World Wildlife Fund (WWF), a leading global
environmental organization, found that Cuba was the
only country in the world to have achieved
sustainable development. Jonathan Loh, one of the
authors of the WWF report, said, “Cuba has reached a
good level of development according to United
Nations’ criteria, thanks to its high literacy level
and a very high life expectancy, while the
ecological footprint is not large since it is a
country with low energy consumption.”
Stop
Lecturing Cuba and Lift the Blockade
When Cuba
and the US held talks about human rights a year ago,
Pedro Luis Pedroso, head of the Cuban delegation,
said, “We expressed our concerns regarding
discrimination and racism patterns in US society,
the worsening of police brutality, torture acts and
extrajudicial executions in the fight on terror and
the legal limbo of prisoners at the US prison camp
in Guantanamo.”
The
hypocrisy of the US government in lecturing Cuba
about its human rights while denying many basic
human rights to the American people is glaring. The
United States should lift the blockade. Obama should
close Guantanamo and return it to Cuba.
Marjorie Cohn has been a professor at Thomas
Jefferson School of Law since 1991. In summer
2016, she will become Professor Emeritus, and
will continue to lecture, write, and provide
media commentary.
http://marjoriecohn.com/ - See more at:
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article44332.htm#sthash.KZh7qrPz.dpuf
Marjorie Cohn has been a professor at Thomas
Jefferson School of Law since 1991. In summer
2016, she will become Professor Emeritus, and
will continue to lecture, write, and provide
media commentary.
http://marjoriecohn.com/ - See more at:
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article44332.htm#sthash.KZh7qrPz.dpuf
Marjorie
Cohn has been a professor at Thomas Jefferson School
of Law since 1991. In summer 2016, she will become
Professor Emeritus, and will continue to lecture,
write, and provide media commentary.
http://marjoriecohn.com/ - |