UN rejects blockade of Cuba, again, as US abstains for first time

October 27, 2016
Issue 

In a historic step toward lifting the blockade on Cuba, the United States abstained Wednesday in the United Nations General Assembly vote, unanimously calling for the end of the Cold War measure for the 25th consecutive year.

"The United States has always voted against this resolution," said US representative to the UN Samantha Power. "Today, the United States will abstain."

Only two countries, the US and Israel, abstained from the vote, while 191 of the 193 member states in the assembly voted in favour of the resolution. Last year, 191 states voted in favour of the resolution, with only the US and Israel voting against.

While the U.S. abstention may be a nod to the potential lifting of the blockade, Cuba insists that it will not return to capitalism.

Cuban Foreign Minister Bruno Rodriguez presented the draft resolution to the assembly, heralding the US announcement of a historic abstention as a 鈥減ositive step鈥 in the ongoing process of normalizing relations between the two countries after decades of resistance by Cuban people.

聽鈥淭here is no doubt that progress has been made 鈥 However, the economic, commercial and financial blockade persists,鈥 Rodriguez said. 鈥淚t causes harm to the Cuban people and impairs the country鈥檚 economic development.鈥

Rodriguez highlighted the fact that US President Barack Obama and other leaders have acknowledged the 鈥渙bsolete鈥 nature of the blockade and the fact that it is a 鈥渇ailed nonsensical and unviable policy and a burden to all citizens that harms the Cuban people and plunges the United States into isolation and should be lifted.鈥 He also argued that ending the blockade would give "meaning, depth and soundness" to the progress toward renewed relations that has been made so far since the end of 2014.

Speaking to the General Assembly, the representative of the Caribbean community Caricom, Jamaica鈥檚 Courtenay Rattray, stressed that 鈥渧irtually the entire international community has consistently highlighted that this 鈥 measure is inconsistent with international law鈥 and called for a move to 鈥渂ury the last remnant of the Cold War in the Americas.鈥

The representative of the Community of Latin American and Caribbean States, known as Celac, the Dominican Republic鈥檚 Francis Lorenzo, echoed condemnation of the blockade for going against the UN charter and international law, calling the measure 鈥渦njust鈥 and a 鈥渕ajor obstacle to the normal development of Cuba.鈥

But although the UN has been telling the White House to nix the blockade for a quarter of a century and is highly politically symbolic, the resolution is non-binding, meaning it holds little weight to force concrete action. Only US Congress, where friendlier relations with Cuba have been rebuffed by Republicans, has the power to lift the blockade on Cuba.

US President Barack Obama has assured his Cuban counterpart Raul Cast that the blockade will be lifted, but he has not specified when that might happen despite maintaining that it is a logical step in the normalisation of ties. Last month, Obama renewed the US Trading with the Enemy Act, extending the blockade against Cuba for another year. Obama has admitted that the blockade is 鈥渉urting the Cuban people.鈥

Cuba claims that the blockade has cost the island nation US$4.7 billion in the past year in lost potential export revenue and trade and financial transactions and a whopping US$753.7 billion over the past half century.

Cuban officials have repeatedly insisted that ending the blockade is an essential precursor to the full reestablishment of US-Cuba relations, which reached a breakthrough with a historic rapprochement in 2014, criticising the policy as an outdated relic of Cold War-era politics.

Despite the landmark reopening of foreign embassies in Havana and Washington, commercial flights between the two countries, and other changes, talks are ongoing and diplomatic challenges remain. And the blockage is at the centre of the debate.

Cuba has also called on the US to return the US naval-occupied territory of Guantanamo to the island, end the Cold War-era migration policy toward Cubans, and to respect Cuban sovereignty by halting all funding of anti-government groups.

[Republished from .]

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