The Guardian 28 June, 2006
UN urges self-determination for Puerto Rico
Dan Margolis & Jose A Cruz
UNITED NATIONS: The UN Special Committee on Decolonisation reaffirmed Puerto Rico’s right to self-determination and independence a fortnight ago, calling on the United States to "expedite a process that will allow" the Caribbean nation to exercise its inalienable right to choose its own destiny. The June 13 action was but the latest in a decades-long series of similar appeals.
The resolution urges the US to return the land it occupies at Vieques Island and Ceiba, to clean up and decontaminate toxic areas polluted by the Pentagon’s military exercises and target practice, to respect human rights, and to release Puerto Rican political prisoners who have been jailed for fighting for the island’s independence or for opposing the US Navy’s bombardment of Vieques.
It also expresses "serious concern" about actions against Puerto Rican independence activists in recent months, alluding to the September 23, 2005, FBI raid that killed 72-year-old Filiberto Ojeda Rios, a pro-independence leader, among other actions.
The measure was unanimously adopted by the Special Committee, which includes about two-dozen member states from all continents, without a formal vote.
While colonialism, as a system, suffered heavy blows in the 1960s, a number of nations remain under the economic and political thumb of big Western powers. Puerto Rico is a case in point. The US continues to dominate the island, and US corporations continue to extract enormous profits from Puerto Rico — to the tune of US$31 billion a year.
Cuba introduced the draft resolution. Rodrigo Malmierca Diaz, Havana’s representative, said, "The people of Puerto Rico still cannot exercise their legitimate right to self-determination because the United States continues its attempts to reaffirm its economic, political and social domination over the territory."
Over 40 speakers addressed the committee. Most of those who spoke from Puerto Rico favoured independence. Supporters of independence argued that, in accordance with the principle of self-determination, the choice must be left up to the people of Puerto Rico.
Hector Pesquera of the Hostos National Independence Movement said that US treatment of Puerto Rico had become worse with the passage of time. He said US laws, such as those that require the use of US ships for bilateral trade, "are strangling the Puerto Rican economy" by adding 20 percent to the cost of commodities.
"The fact that the Puerto Rican people favour decolonisation is not in doubt", said Fernando J Martin of the Puerto Rican Independence Party. He said Puerto Rico is the one nation whose destiny is unfulfilled in the wake of the Independence Congress of 1836, headed up by Simon Bolivar.
Carlos Dalmau Ramírez, spokesman for the pro-autonomist Popular Democratic Party, said the UN should discuss the case of Puerto Rico in the General Assembly. He called on the UN to defend Puerto Rico’s right to self-determination by working in favour of a constitutional convention of Puerto Ricans. He said that "no one should have any doubt that the Puerto Rican people constitute a nation", in an obvious reference to the pro-statehood forces, who say Puerto Ricans are just an ethnic grouping within the US nation.
The pro-statehood New Progressive Party did not send anyone to testify at the UN, preferring to try to work with the US Congress and the Bush administration to impose statehood on Puerto Rico.
Among the outspoken international supporters of Puerto Rico’s independence were former Argentine President Raul Alfonsin of the Socialist International’s Committee for Latin America, and Gustavo Carvajal of the Conference of Political Parties of Latin America.
Imeria Nuńez De Odreman, Venezuela’s spokesperson, said, "Venezuela firmly and categorically favours the total independence of Puerto Rico, with the understanding that any solution in that regard must originate with the Puerto Rican people."
People’s Weekly World