Record vote for UN resolution condemning Cuba embargo
UN: A record 188 countries voted Tuesday for an annual UN General
Assembly resolution condemning the five-decade old US embargo against
Cuba.
The almost-ritual UN debate saw Cuban Foreign Minister Bruno
Rodriguez lash out at what he called "the inhuman, failed and
anachronistic policy of 11 successive US administrations" since the full
embargo was imposed in 1962.
The United States reaffirmed that while $2 billion in remittances had
been sent to the Communist-ruled island by Cuban Americans in 2011, it
would only ease the embargo when Cuba carries out major social and
economic changes. The vote in favor rose from 186 for the 20th
anniversary resolution last year.
This time the United States, Israel and Palau opposed the resolution
while the Marshall Islands and Micronesia abstained. Rodriguez said US
President Barack Obama had offered a new beginning with Cuba when he
first came to power in 2008. "However the reality of the last four years
has been characterized by a persistent tightening of the economic,
commercial and financial embargo," he told the 193-member assembly.
The minister said Cuban hospitals could not get heart and anti-cancer
medicines as he restated his government's annual charge that the US
sanctions amount to "genocide." "There is no legitimate or moral reason
to maintain this embargo which is anchored in the Cold War," Rodriguez
argued.
Russia, China, Organization of Islamic Cooperation member states and
the Non-Aligned movement all spoke out against the embargo.
AFP
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