From
United Nations Articles Section
12 July 2000 Press Release
GA/COL/3035
SPECIAL DECOLONIZATION
COMMITTEE HEARS PETITIONERS ON PUERTO RICO
The bombing practice activities
of the United States Navy on the Puerto
Rican island of Vieques and the issue of the Territory's political
status were the main themes during this morning's meeting of
the Special
Committee on Decolonization as it heard petitioners on the question
of
Puerto Rico.
Juan Maria Bras of Causa Comun
Independentista (Proyecto Educativo
Puertorriqueno) said the United States military had promulgated
the
Vieques crisis with the sole purpose of affirming the domination
of
Puerto Rico, despite the consensus in the commonwealth that it
must
cease its activity there. In continuing military exercises on
Vieques,
raw force had prevailed against what was right. The Navy must
end the
bombing immediately and leave Vieques forever.
He joined many other petitioners
in calling for a process of genuine
self- determination for Puerto Rico. A consensus was slowly forming
in
Puerto Rico on how that process would take place, and the Special
Committee should promote it.
Marisol Corretjer of Partido
Nationalista de Puerto Rico said
international law did not uphold the presence of the United States
in
Puerto Rico, as it derived from an act of aggression carried
out in
1898. The act of aggression invalidated any preceding treaty,
such as
the Treaty of Paris, under which the United States had acquired
Puerto
Rico. Rather than trying to perpetuate its colonial dominance,
the
United States must begin a genuine decolonization exercise.
However, Jose Adames of Al Frente
said that statehood was the solution
to many problems, including that of Vieques. Independence was
merely a
distraction, as fewer than 4 per cent of Puerto Ricans were interested
in it. It was true that Puerto Ricans who lived on the island
were
second-class citizens, but that would all change with statehood.
As the
fifty-first state, Puerto Rico would have representation at the
national
level and thus control its own destiny.
Nilda Luz Rexach of National
Advancement for Puerto Rican Culture, said
that as a citizen of Puerto Rico and the United States, nobody
had the
right to question or remove her United States citizenship. All
Puerto
Ricans were American citizens like all others. Puerto Rico was
considered the best recruitment centre for the United States
military,
but many felt the United States had forgotten the loyal service
of
Puerto Rican soldiers.
The Special Committee also heard
petitioners from Colegio de Abagados de
Puerto Rico, Nuevo Movimiento Independentista Puertorriqueno,
Frente
Socialista, ProLibertad, Commission of the Churches on International
Affairs, Partido
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Decolonization Committee - 1a
- Press Release GA/COL/3035 10th Meeting
(AM) 12 July 2000
Independentista Puertorriqueno,
Instituto Puertorriqueno de Relaciones
Internacionales, Concerned Puerto Rican Americans, Gran Oriente
Nacional: Puerto Rico, Todo Puerto Rico con Vieques, Sociedad
Bolivariana de Puerto Rico and Puerto Rico, Mi Patria.
The representative of Cuba also
spoke.
When the Special Committee meets
again at 3. p.m. today, it will hear
more petitioners on the question of Puerto Rico. It is also expected
to
take action on a number of draft resolutions.
Special Committee Work Programme
The Special Committee on the Situation with regard to the Implementation
of the Declaration on the Granting of Independence to Colonial
Countries
and Peoples met this morning to hear petitioners on the question
of
Puerto Rico.
Before the Committee was the
Special Committee decision of 6 July
concerning Puerto Rico (document A/AC.109/2000/L.11), a draft
resolution
sponsored by Cuba. By terms of the text, the General Assembly
would
reaffirm the inalienable right of the people of Puerto Rico to
self-determination and independence in conformity with Assembly
resolution 1514 v(XV) and the applicability of the fundamental
principles of that resolution to the question of Puerto Rico.
By other terms, the Assembly
would also reaffirm its hope, and that of
the international community, that the Government of the United
States
will assume the responsibility of expediting a process that will
allow
the Puerto Rican people to fully exercise their inalienable right
to
self-determination and independence.
The Assembly would reiterate
that the Puerto Rican people constitute a
Latin American and Caribbean nation that has its own and unequivocal
national identity, by other terms. Further, it would note with
satisfaction that, during the past year, progress has been achieved
towards the implementation of a mechanism ensuring the full
participation of representatives of all viewpoints prevailing
in Puerto
Rico, such as the proposals to convene a sovereign Constituent
Conference of the people of Puerto Rico.
Also by the text, the General
Assembly would encourage the Government of
the United States, in line with the need to guarantee to the
Puerto
Rican people their legitimate right to self-determination and
the
protection of their human rights, to order the halt of its armed
forces'
military drills and manoeuvres on Vieques Island, which is inhabited;
return the occupied land to the people of Puerto Rico; halt the
persecution, arrests and harassment of peaceful demonstrators;
respect
fundamental rights, such as the right to health and economic
development; and decontaminate the impact area.
The Assembly would, by other
terms, welcome the release of 11 Puerto
Rican prisoners and express its hope that the President of the
United
States will release all Puerto Rican political prisoners serving
sentences in United States prisons on cases related to the struggle
for
the independence of Puerto Rico.
Also before the Committee was
a report by the Committeeâs Rapporteur on
the Special Committee decision of 11 August 1998 concerning Puerto
Rico
(document A/AC.109/2000/L.3) providing information on the Territory,
including general background and economic development. Puerto
Rico is
the most easterly and smallest of the Greater Antilles in the
Caribbean
Sea, covering 8,637.7 square kilometres, including the nearby
islands of
Vieques, Culebra and Mona. The population was estimated at 3.8
million
by the 1990 census and a reported 2.5 million to 3 million Puerto
Ricans
live in the United States.
The report says that Puerto Rico
was a colony of Spain until the end of
the Spanish-American War in 1898. It was ceded to the United
States,
which established a military protectorate on the island between
1898 and
1900. In that year, a civilian government was established, including
a
popularly elected legislature. However, the Governor and members
of the
Executive Council were appointed by Washington and retained broad
powers
over the legislature.
According to the report, Puerto
Rico is represented in the Government of
the United states by a Resident Commissioner, who is a non-voting
member
of the United States House of Representatives, but a voting member
of
the committees on which he or she sits. Although the Territory
has its
own courts, its legal system is integrated into the United States
federal judicial system via the First Circuit Court of Appeals
and
federal law trumps local law.
Statements
EDUARDO VILLANUEVA MUNOZ, Colegio
de Abogados de Puerto Rico, said that
Puerto Rico was hobbled by a colonial regime. It was necessary
to end
the situation, and for this purpose mechanisms needed to be developed
to
move towards self-determination and some form of sovereignty.
He asked
the Committee for its assistance in moving the process forward,
including the convening of an appropriate assembly.
He also urged that action be
taken to cease bombings on the island of
Vieques, and called for the restoration and decontamination of
the
island. The navy should cease its bombing now, he said, and not
wait
until 2003. All political prisoners held because of the Vieques
matter
should be released.
JULIO MURIENTE PEREZ, Nuevo Movimiento
Independentista Puertorriqueno,
said that the Special Committee had, over the past 20 years,
repeatedly
recognized the right of Puerto Rico to self-determination. The
Puerto
Rican people needed to see further action on that matter and
on the
continued bombing of the island of Vieques.
This had been the year of Vieques,
he said. Rarely had there been such
solidarity between so many sectors of Puerto Rican society, with
so many
acts of civil disobedience, and hundreds arrested. He asked the
Special
Committee and their Latin American and Caribbean neighbours for
support
in ending the untenable situation that had begun 100 years ago
with the
United States invasion of his country.
JORGE FARINACCI GARCIA, Frente
Socialista, said the population of
Vieques had been devastated by the bombings carried out by the
United
States Navy. Since last summer the people's resistance to the
Navy's
depredations had increased. Dozens of defenders of Vieques were
in
prison and some faced long sentences for entering Navy land.
He said that about 40 militant
members of his organization had been
persecuted for participating in similar activities. The issue
of Vieques
was being aggravated by the stubbornness of the United States,
which was
using intimidation, aggression and bribery to suppress demonstrations
against the Navy's activities. However, none of those methods
would
succeed.
There was no political will in
Washington to end the colonial regime in
Puerto Rico, he said. His organization demanded the immediate
withdrawal
of the military, legal and political apparatus as well as the
release of
all political prisoners in United States prisons. The resolution
on
Puerto Rico should be brought before the General Assembly as
soon as
possible for immediate adoption.
EDDIE PAGAN, ProLibertad, said that on 11 August
1999, President Clinton
had decided to release 11 prisoners jailed for their pro-independence
activities. Among those who had refused clemency were five who
had been
improperly imprisoned through government-sanctioned sabotage,
intimidation and manipulation for their pro-independence activities.
He said that since 1952, the
administering Power had discontinued the
transmission of information to the United Nations, allowing the
United
States to conceal its actions in Puerto Rico. It did not feel
compelled
to disclose its activities, except to say that the question of
Puerto
Rico was a domestic matter.
The Navy had turned the Vieques
region into a cottage industry, he said.
The United States strategy involved bribery and stalling in the
hope
that the spirit of the people of Vieques would eventually be
broken. The
United Nations resolution reaffirming the inalienable right of
the
Puerto Rican people to self- determination was a call that had
gone
unheard.
Reverend EUNICE SANTANA, on behalf
of the Commission of Churches on
International Affairs, expressed disappointment that the Committeeâs
agenda on Puerto Rico had not been completed. This was somewhat
explainable by the exercise of the will of the colonizing power.
The
United States actions on Puerto Rico had gone beyond what was
desirable,
fair and reasonable, and she requested the attention of the Special
Committee on an urgent basis.
Events of the past 20 months
had illustrated how the United States had
acted as a colonizing power in Puerto Rico, notably in violating,
with
impunity, the fundamental rights of the people of Vieques. Despite
calls
from the people of Puerto Rico and many others, the United States
had
trampled on the basic principles of democracy. This included
a
referendum, proposed on the issue, that disregarded the option
of an
immediate withdrawal of the navy, which a majority of Puerto
Ricans
wanted.
She urged the Special Committee
to affirm that people had a right to
self- determination as set out in the Bible and United Nations
resolutions. She also asked for the members of the Committee
to support
the elaboration of a legitimate process of self-determination,
to urge
the United States to cooperate with such a process and to keep
the
question of Puerto Rico and Vieques on the agenda.
FERNANDO J. MARTIN, Partido Independentista
Puertoriqueno, said that the
recent events in Vieques illustrated the baleful conduct of the
United
States Government in regard to Puerto Rico, including a campaign
of
persecution which was unprecedented in recent times.
The United States had used force
to remove the people who had camped out
in the restricted areas, he said. Many had been arrested and
jailed.
Many remained in prison because they were unable to post bail.
Others,
like himself, needed to pay a fine within 30 days. Over 100 people,
including more than one third of the candidates for mayoral posts,
were
in prison. The Special Committee must send a strong message that
such
events were unacceptable in the last year of the decade to end
colonialism.
JAVIER COLON MORERA, Instituto
Puertorriqueno de Relaciones
Internacionales, said that the unfinished agenda of the Special
Committee included the ending of military occupation. The many
requests
of the Special Committee, as well as United States Senator Daniel
Patrick Moynihan's plea for an end to the occupation of Puerto
Rico, had
been ignored by the United States Government.
He said that uranium, plutonium,
napalm and nitroglycerine had been
found in Vieques. They and other heavy metals were linked to
serious
illnesses, including cancer, afflicting the people of Vieques.
The Navy
was occupying the most fertile land in Vieques, spoiling its
best
beaches as well as ruining its best roads. The situation violated
the
most fundamental right of a people to their own natural resources.
NILDA LUZ REXACH, National Advancement
for Puerto Rican Culture, said
she was a citizen of Puerto Rico and the United States. Nobody
had the
right to question or remove her United States citizenship. All
Puerto
Ricans were American citizens like all others.
She said the question of Vieques,
rather than an issue of human rights
as many had tried to show, had been converted into a political
issue.
The United States armed forces were the same as the armed forces
of
Puerto Rico. The commonwealth was considered the best recruitment
centre
for the United States military. But many felt the United States
had
forgotten the loyal service of Puerto Rican soldiers.
Some political leaders were lying
to the people, promising them that in
a new commonwealth they would have no need for representation
in the
United States Congress, she said. They were trying to increase
their own
political power by disenfranchising the Puerto Rican people.
Hopefully,
the Territory would soon become the fifty-first state.
JOSE ADAMES, Al Frente, said
that many issues had dominated recent
discussion about how to further the self-determination of Puerto
Rico.
One was independence, kept in the fore by Cuba, even though fewer
than 4
per cent of Puerto Ricans were interested in that solution.
RAFAEL DAUSA CESPEDES (Cuba)
requested the Acting Chairman to ask the
petitioner to keep to the rules and not to make offensive remarks
about
member countries of the Special Committee.
BERNARD TANOH-BOUTCHOUE (Cote
dâIvoire) also asked the petitioner not to
make offensive remarks against a member country of the Special
Committee.
Mr. ADAMES continued with his
petition, making further reference to
Cuba.
RODOLFO BENITEZ VERSON (Cuba)
said the petitioner should avoid offensive
remarks or the Cuban delegation would be forced to request that
his
petition be disallowed.
Mr. Adames then continued, saying
that the problem of Vieques now
dominated the issue. However, for this problem and all problems
of
self-determination, statehood was the only solution. If statehood
were
achieved, the problem of Vieques could be dealt with through
the State
of Puerto Ricoâs representation at the national level.
The government of Puerto Rico
had already been designed like the
government of any other state of the United States. Puerto Ricans
lived
throughout the United States. But the way it was now, he said,
Puerto
Ricans who lived on the island were second-class citizens. That
would
all change with statehood.
SALVADOR VARGAS, JR, Concerned
Puerto Rican Americans, urged the United
Nations to take strong action to help free Puerto Rico from its
current
master, and in so doing prevent the genocide that the United
States had
contemplated since its invasion of the island. The United Nations
must
recognize Puerto Rico as an independent nation and give it a
seat in the
General Assembly.
He said that every member nationâs
sovereignty was in danger of
disappearing because of the power aspirations of the United States,
and
he warned that a bloodbath would occur in Puerto Rico if statehood
was
forced. He requested that Cuba remain firmly on the side of Puerto
Rican
independence.
HECTOR BENGOCHEA, Gran Oriente
Nacional: Puerto Rico, said Puerto Rico
had been a Spanish colony until the United States had won it
as a prize
of war following the Spanish-American War. Vieques had been bombed
for
the last 60 years, suffered tremendous ecological damage and
deteriorating health. It had the highest incidence of cancer
and
respiratory diseases of the Puerto Rican nation. The people's
almost
unanimous opinion that the Navy must cease its activities had
resulted
in intimidation and imprisonment.
He said that on the other hand,
the United States had reacted timidly to
the issue of Puerto Rico's political status. The entire
self-determination process must be a genuine and full transfer
of
powers, as failure to transfer power would mean keeping it in
the hands
of the United States Congress. The Special Committee must speak
out on
the issue because in less than six months, it would have to report
to
the world on whether it had accomplished its agenda to rid the
world of
colonialism.
JOSE PARALITICCI, Todo Puerto
Rico con Vieques, said it was important
for the Special Committee to know that the struggle for Vieques
had the
support of all ideological opinions. Eighty per cent or more
of Puerto
Ricans wanted the United States Navy to leave Vieques. There
was
solidarity for the Navy's withdrawal among Latin Americans, pacifists
and anti-militarists, as well as people in the United States,
where
various cities, city councils and other groups had given their
support.
International solidarity had gone far beyond the support of non-
governmental organizations (NGOs).
He said Argentina, Uruguay and
Venezuela supported the cause. A protest
had been sent to the new President of the Dominican Republic
for having
sent the country's armed forces to Vieques for military exercises.
He
had pledged that they would not participate again in such exercises.
The
number of arrests on Vieques would multiply because the people
were
determined to end the Navy's presence and civil disobedience
would
continue.
EDGARDO DIAZ DIAZ, Sociedad Bolivariana
de Puerto Rico, said that it was
very difficult for Latin societies to develop while dominated
by
powerful economies such as that of the United States. In addition,
he
said, the Puerto Rican vote rarely had an effect, even though
citizens
there participated in elections at a much higher rate than in
most of
the United States.
In fact, they had little control
over many of the situations that
affected them, he said. One such situation was Vieques. Puerto
Ricans
had shown the world their opposition to the continued shooting
on the
island -- but it continued.
Puerto Ricans had struggled against
privatization, fostered the growth
of unions and established alliances with international organizations,
to
further their self determination, he said. But it was not easy
to end
colonial domination, so he requested the Special Committeeâs
assistance
in ending their terrible situation.
JUAN MARIA BRAS, on behalf of
Causa Comun Independentista (Proyecto
Educativo Puertorriqueno), remarked that two successive generations
of
diplomats from all over the world had supported Puerto Rican
aspirations, by continuing the denunciation of their condition
as a
colony. And some movement had occurred. On the 100th anniversary
of the
United Statesâ acquisition of Puerto Rico, President William
Clinton
vowed he would seek a redefinition of the relationship between
Puerto
Rico and the United States. However, near the end of his Presidency,
the
Congress continued to treat the land and people as if they were
mere
merchandise and property of the United States.
In addition, the military had
promulgated the crisis of Vieques with the
sole purpose of affirming the domination of Puerto Rico, despite
the
consensus in Puerto Rico that it should cease its activity there.
Raw
force had prevailed against what was right. He demanded that
the Navy
immediately put an end to the bombing and leave Vieques forever.
In
addition, he said, a process of genuine self-determination must
begin. A
consensus was slowly forming within Puerto Rico on how that process
would take place. He urged the Special Committee to promote it.
LOLITA LEBRON, Puerto Rico Mi
Patria, said Puerto Ricans were grateful
for those who supported their struggle. They knew the United
Nations
would continue to support that cause even now when a peaceful
revolution
was taking place in Puerto Rico. It was a revolution of the conscience
against the crimes of the United States Navy. The struggle could
not be
halted.
Puerto Ricans had paralyzed the
Navy's operations for a year now, she
said. Support for the defence of peace and justice for Vieques
was
universal. Those who loved justice and peace had expressed their
support
for Vieques in the Americas, Europe, Asia and elsewhere. The
Navy's
plans to resume its manoeuvres were being frustrated even now.
Hundreds
of Puerto Ricans had defied Navy laws by entering the firing
zones -ö a
once-fertile land, now torn apart and barren.
MARISOL CORRETJER, Partido Nationalista
de Puerto Rico, said the
presence of the United States in Puerto Rico derived from an
act of
aggression carried out in 1898. International law did not uphold
any
territorial acquisition that was the result of aggression. The
act of
aggression invalidated any preceding treaty, such as the Treaty
of Paris
under which the United States had acquired Puerto Rico. That
illegal
situation could only be overcome when the Puerto Ricans exercised
their
right to self-determination.
She said the United States clung
to its position in defiance of United
Nations resolutions. Rather than trying to perpetuate its colonial
dominance, the United States must begin a genuine decolonization
exercise and release all political prisoners still held in its
jails.
It was known that new Tomahawk
and other tactical missiles were to be
tested in Vieques waters in the near future, she said. It was
also known
that nuclear material sometimes accompanied United States naval
vessels
to Vieques. An independent Puerto Rico would expose to the world
the
crimes committed against the environment. The Special Committee
must not
become an accomplice to the genocide being perpetrated against
the
Puerto Rican people.
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