---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Liberation News Service <[email protected]>
Date: Fri, Mar 4, 2011 at 8:10 PM
Subject: Venezuela statement in UNHRC: We Condemn the Killing of Innocents,
But We Cannot Accept Intervention in Libya
To: Liberation News Service <[email protected]>




---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: CPIML Intl. Deptt <[email protected]>
Date: Fri, Mar 4, 2011 at 12:28 PM
Subject: Venezuela statement in UNHRC: We Condemn the Killing of Innocents,
But We Cannot Accept Intervention in Libya
To: Liberation News Service <[email protected]>


 * We Condemn the Killing of Innocents, But We Cannot Accept Intervention in
Libya*
*by Rodolfo Reyes*

*Statement of Ambassador Rodolfo Reyes, Permanent Representative, before the
Human Rights Council on the Situation in Libya, Geneva, 25 February 2011*

Mr. President:

Less than 72 hours ago, Cuba, through its Foreign Minister, communicated the
following in Brussels:

"We are following with utmost attention the current events in the internal
affairs of Libya and their international repercussions.  A lot of news
reports, which are often contradictory, are being disseminated.  Some US
politicians and news media are inciting violence, military aggression, and
foreign intervention.  The temperatures are high everywhere, which I fear
may lead to grave domestic and international errors.

We hope that the Libyan people will be able to soon arrive at a peaceful and
sovereign solution to the situation created there, without any kind of
foreign interference or intervention, a solution that would guarantee the
integrity of the Libyan nation."

The situation continues to be confusing and rapidly evolving.  Information
emerges in fragments, in many cases reports diverge, and it is even possible
to detect an effort to use fragmentary and contradictory information with
the intention of causing further destabilization, which can result in much
damage and many losses of lives.

Our concerns reflected in the above statement have regrettably become
reality, and Libya is already embroiled in a civil war, in a context of a
global economic crisis of major proportions which has plunged the peoples of
North Africa and the rest of the world in the state of despair.

All of us are concerned about the losses of human lives and injuries
suffered by the civilian population, inflicted by the conflict that is
unfolding in Libya today.  No one with integrity can accept the killing of
innocent civilians, which we condemn categorically anywhere it happens.  In
this regard we entirely share the world opinion.

However, we cannot accept the risk that this tragic situation may be
exploited opportunistically to satisfy the interventionist appetites, to rob
the Libyan people of their sovereignty, and to seize their resources.
Already there is talk of a humanitarian military intervention, which we
oppose, because, instead of solving the problem, it will complicate it much
more and can have other serious implications.  From the beginning, Cuba has
denounced the plans to occupy Libya and categorically rejects any maneuver
to promote such ideas.  It is certain that the Libyan people are opposed to
any foreign military intervention.

Mr. President:

It is our duty to speak out against certain elements of the resolution
adopted which constitute a terrible precedent for cooperation on human
rights which must be maintained in the work of this Council.

>From the beginning, when we were still building this new Council, Cuba
opposed the clause about suspension of membership of a State.  Its inclusion
in Resolution 
60/251<http://www2.ohchr.org/english/bodies/hrcouncil/docs/a.res.60.251_en.pdf>set
a negative precedent, which burdened the nascent organ with an
additive
which has no parallel in any other organ of the United Nations.
Fortunately, it has never been invoked till today, but its use in this case
will open the doors to those who seek to legitimate this mechanism with the
goal of using it selectively against those countries that disagree with its
standards.

Cuba, consequently, disassociates itself from Operative Paragraph 14 of the
revised text of the resolution adopted.

To conclude, Mr. President, Cuba wishes to issue a call for calm and to
reiterate its confidence in the capacity of the Libyan people to resolve
their internal problems without any foreign interference and to preserve the
peace, stability, and sovereignty of their country.

Thank you very much
  "Human Rights Council Debates Situation of Human Rights in
Libya"<http://www.ohchr.org/en/NewsEvents/Pages/DisplayNews.aspx?NewsID=10766&LangID=E>(HRC
Media, 25 February 2011).
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-- 


You cannot build anything on the foundations of caste. You cannot build up a
nation, you cannot build up a morality. Anything that you will build on the
foundations of caste will crack and will never be a whole.
-AMBEDKAR



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