1986
[DOCID: f:hr91eh.txt]
H. Res. 91
In the House of Representatives, U.S.,
April 3, 2001.
Whereas, according to the Department of State and international human rights
organizations, the Government of Cuba continues to commit widespread and
well-documented human rights violations against the Cuban people and to
detain hundreds more as political prisoners;
Whereas the Castro regime systematically violates all of the fundamental civil
and political rights of the Cuban people, denying freedoms of speech,
press, assembly, movement, religion, and association, the right to
change their government, and the right to due process and fair trials;
Whereas, in law and in practice, the Government of Cuba restricts the freedom of
religion of the Cuban people and engages in efforts to control and
monitor religious institutions through surveillance, infiltration,
evictions, restrictions on access to computer and communication
equipment, and harassment of religious professionals and lay persons;
Whereas the totalitarian regime of Fidel Castro actively suppresses all peaceful
opposition and dissent by the Cuban people using undercover agents,
informers, rapid response brigades, Committees for the Defense of the
Revolution, surveillance, phone tapping, intimidation, defamation,
arbitrary detention, house arrest, arbitrary searches, evictions, travel
restrictions, politically-motivated dismissals from employment, and
forced exile;
Whereas workers' rights are effectively denied by a system in which foreign
investors are forced to contract labor from the Government of Cuba and
to pay the regime in hard currency knowing that the regime will pay less
than 5 percent of these wages in local currency to the workers
themselves;
Whereas these abuses by the Government of Cuba violate internationally accepted
norms of conduct;
Whereas the House of Representatives is mindful of the admonishment of former
Mexican President Ernesto Zedillo during the last Ibero-American Summit
in Havana, Cuba, that ``[t]here can be no sovereign nations without free
men and women [. . . m]en and women who can freely exercise their
essential freedoms: freedom of thought and opinion, freedom of
participation, freedom of dissent, freedom of decision'';
Whereas President Vaclav Havel, an essential figure in the Czech Republic's
transition to democracy, has counseled that ``[w]e thus know that by
voicing open criticism of undemocratic conditions in Cuba, we encourage
all the brave Cubans who endure persecution and years of prison for
their loyalty to the ideals of freedom and human dignity'';
Whereas former President Lech Walesa, leader of the Polish solidarity movement,
has urged the world to ``mobilize its resources, just as was done in
support of Polish Solidarnosc and the Polish workers, to express their
support for Cuban workers and to monitor labor rights'' in Cuba;
Whereas efforts to document, expose, and address human rights abuses in Cuba are
complicated by the fact that the Government of Cuba continues to deny
international human rights and humanitarian monitors access to the
country;
Whereas Pax Christi further reports that these efforts are complicated because
``a conspiracy of silence has fallen over Cuba'' in which diplomats and
entrepreneurs refuse even to discuss labor rights and other human rights
issues in Cuba, some ``for fear of endangering the relations with the
Cuban government'', and businessmen investing in Cuba ``openly declare
that the theme of human rights was not of their concern'';
Whereas the annual meeting of the United Nations Commission on Human Rights in
Geneva provides an excellent forum to spotlight human rights and
expressing international support for improved human rights performance
in Cuba and elsewhere;
Whereas the goal of United States policy in Cuba is to promote a peaceful
transition to democracy through an active policy of assisting the forces
of change on the island;
Whereas the United States may provide assistance through appropriate
nongovernmental organizations to help individuals and organizations to
promote nonviolent democratic change and promote respect for human
rights in Cuba; and
Whereas the President is authorized to engage in democracy-building efforts in
Cuba, including the provision of (1) publications and other
informational materials on transitions to democracy, human rights, and
market economies to independent groups in Cuba, (2) humanitarian
assistance to victims of political repression and their families, (3)
support for democratic and human rights groups in Cuba, and (4) support
for visits and permanent deployment of democratic and international
human rights monitors in Cuba: Now, therefore, be it
Resolved, That--
(1) the House of Representatives condemns the repressive and
totalitarian actions of the Government of Cuba against the Cuban people;
and
(2) it is the sense of the House of Representatives that the
President--
(A) should have an action-oriented policy of directly
assisting the Cuban people and independent organizations,
modeled on United States support under former President Ronald
Reagan, including support by United States trade unions, for
Poland's Solidarity movement (``Solidarnosc''), to strengthen
the forces of change and to improve human rights within Cuba;
and
(B) should make all efforts necessary at the meeting of the
United Nations Human Rights Commission in Geneva in 2001 to
obtain the passage by the Commission of a resolution condemning
the Government of Cuba for its human rights abuses, and to
secure the appointment of a Special Rapporteur for Cuba.
Attest:
Clerk.
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