Wednesday, August 21, 2013

How Cuba Will Use UNHRC Nominee Jean Ziegler to Spread Lies, Propaganda

How Cuba Will Use UNHRC Nominee Jean Ziegler to Spread Lies, Propaganda
Published by unwatch - at August 19, 2013

November 1, 2007, in Havana, Cuba: Jean Ziegler, UN Special Rapporteur
on The Right to Food (L) is welcomed by Cuba's Foreign Minister Felipe
Perez Roque. Ziegler's visit marks the first time in many years that
Cuba has allowed a UN envoy to visit Cuba on human rights issues.
"Ziegler shares the view of the ailing Cuban President Fidel Castro that
it is a crime against humanity to use agriculturally productive soil for
growing crops for biofuel production instead of for foodstuffs." (Photo
by Sven Creutzmann/Mambo photo/Getty Images)

Jean Ziegler, co-founder, co-manager and 2002 recipient of the Qaddafi
human rights prize, is hoping to return to the UN Human Rights Council
in September, thanks to the sponsorship and lobbying efforts of the
Swiss government.

While Switzerland's Note Verbale on Ziegler's behalf invokes his prior
work as a UNHRC expert, the truth is that his record there was marked by
shameless politicization and propaganda for some of the world's most
autocratic regimes.

A classic example is Ziegler's use of his UN mandate to propagandize for
the Communist regime of Fidel Castro.

For years, Cuba had refused to allow entry to the UNHRC's designated
country investigator on Cuba, Christine Chanet.

Finally, in June 2007, in a midnight maneuver, the council abolished the
mandate on Cuba, the result of a pressure campaign by Havana and its
powerful allies in the non-aligned, Arab and Islamic groups at the UN.

Suddenly, a few months later, in October 2007, Jean Ziegler, the
council's "expert on the right to food" — a position initiated by Cuba
in 2000 specially for Ziegler — arrived in Cuba on an official visit.

Cuban TV: "Cuba is one of the most advanced countries
in the world in protecting the right to food, affirmed Jean Ziegler,
UN expert on the right to food."

Ziegler's visit was a shock to many because Cuba had not only rejected
visits by the UNHRC country investigator Chanet, but it also refused to
admit the Special Rapporteur on the independence of judges and lawyers,
who had issued a request in 1995, with unanswered follow-up requests in
1996 and 1999; and Cuba also rejected a visit by the Special Rapporteur
on freedom of religion, who had submitted a request for a visit in 2006.

Ziegler's visit was a massive exercise in propaganda. UN experts are
supposed to hold governments to account; Ziegler did the opposite. He
showered the Castro regime with praise.

His trip was a stage-managed Potemkin visit for international
consumption, designed to cleanse Cuba's U.N. reputation after the
elimination of Chanet's mandate. If the Human Rights Council applied its
own rules, Ziegler should have been forced to recuse himself from
reporting on Cuba.

While in Cuba, Ziegler declined an invitation to meet dissidents
because, he said, it might "put in danger" his hosts' "openness."

Instead, he hailed the Castro regime as a model government — "in the
vanguard of the struggle for the right to food."

His written report submitted later to the council similarly failed to
criticize Cuba. Instead he attacked the U.S. for "illegal" acts:

To the United States, the Special Rapporteur recommends in the strongest
way the removal of the illegal embargo against Cuba. Cuba should be
granted open access to export markets, and the unnecessary cost and
inconvenience that the embargo places on the system of food importation
in Cuba should be eliminated. Cuba should be entitled to access the
credit facilities of the World Bank, IMF and the Inter-American
Development Bank. The travel ban on staff of the World Bank and other
international organizations should be lifted, and the inconveniences
created for United Nations staff,scientists, civil society members and
others working to develop Cuba's capacity to realize the right to food
should be eased.

Here are just a few samples of what Ziegler did write about Cuba in his
report:

"Cuba is a fascinating country"
"With new opportunities for regional cooperation, including through the
Bolivarian Alternative for the Americas (ALBA) with Venezuela, Bolivia
and Nicaragua, Cuba has the potential to win "the battle for life" that
José Marti, the hero of the fight for independence, was calling for."
"Household food security is one of the highest priorities of the
Government."
"Cuba has always been very active in the promotion of the right to food
in the Human Rights Council, the former Commission on Human Rights and
the General Assembly. The Minister for Foreign Affairs confirmed to the
Special Rapporteur that Cuba considers the right to food to be a
fundamental human right. This means that the Government of Cuba is fully
committed under international law to respecting, protecting and
fulfilling the right to food of all children, women and men in its
territory."
In trying to justify his trip, Ziegler insisted that, Swiss news
reported, "the gesture will not be limited to him alone and other UN
envoys will benefit as a result."

His written report of the visit added:

The Special Rapporteur is very encouraged by Cuba's commitments to
increase its cooperation with the Human Rights Council. He welcomes the
declaration made by Felipe Pérez Roque, Minister for Foreign Affairs on
10 December 2007 to the effect that Cuba will…. extend invitations to
other special procedures of the Council.

So, six years later, how many council investigators have been admitted?

Zero. Ziegler lied.

According to the UNHRC website, which lists the status of pending
requests, all of the above-listed requests submitted to Cuba by special
rapporteurs remain pending — meaning, they have gone unanswered for as
much as 18 years.

So are additional requests to visit Cuba made by the Special Rapporteur
on violence against women, the Special Rapporteur on freedom of
association and assembly, and the Special Rapporteur on torture, whose
2009 request was supposed to be under consideration, yet remains pending.

What is Cuba hiding? Those who know its human rights record know the answer.

Ziegler had promised that Cuba's permission for his visit was not
specific to him, but part of a giant opening for the UN. Ziegler was
there to build an opening.

There was no opening. It was all for propaganda. Six years later, we can
say: Ziegler lied.

Source: "How Cuba Will Use UNHRC Nominee Jean Ziegler to Spread Lies,
Propaganda at View from Geneva" -
http://blog.unwatch.org/index.php/2013/08/19/exposed-jean-zieglers-un-visit-for-cuban-propaganda/

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