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Washington, D.C. - The Inter-American Commission on Human Rights
(IACHR) monitored the reform to introduce certain fundamental rights
into Cuba’s constitution, a process that ended in the referendum
held on February 24, 2019.
The Commission received complaints from some Cuban civil society
organizations about a series of flaws in the process of socializing and
debating the proposed new constitution. Those organizations noted that,
despite their efforts to engage in pluralist dialogue, there were “political
and legal hurdles” that restricted effective citizen participation. Some
activists who campaigned against the new text reported that they had been
intimidated, arrested and, in some cases, beaten up by the security forces,
and that their homes had been besieged by the military the week before the
referendum. The Commission condemns all forms of intimidation and aggression
against dissidents, activists, human rights defenders and journalists.
The media reported allegations of election fraud on referendum day. Such
alleged irregularities included voting in pencil, non-secret ballots, the
exclusion of more than two million Cubans who live abroad and inadequate
ballot boxes. The IACHR expresses its concern about the possibility that the
referendum may not have complied with the conditions necessary for free,
secret, reliable, independent elections that safeguard the principles of
universality and plurality. For years, the IACHR has been critical of the
lack of conditions in Cuba for authentic political participation from
sectors representing various lines of thought. Such criticism persists in
spite of the recent constitutional reform. In particular, criticism focuses
on the fact that elections lack plurality and independence and involve the
presence of just one party, the ban on associations for political purposes
and arbitrary restrictions on freedom of expression and the right to freedom
of assembly, among other fundamental rights, as well as the need for plural
participation in any constitutional reform process.
In spite of all that, the IACHR notes that, concerning human rights, the
new constitution enshrines judicial safeguards like habeas corpus and the
principle of presumption of innocence, along with a whole catalogue of civil
and political fundamental rights including the right to life and the ban on
forced disappearances, torture and cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or
punishment, as well as economic, social, cultural and environmental rights
and the rights to water, health and free education, among others. The new
constitution also incorporates the right to private property, along with the
equality principle and the ban on discrimination based on gender, sexual
orientation, gender identity, ethnic background and disability. The new
constitution states that Cuba’s international relations will be based on the
defense and protection of human rights, and it mentions the State’s
obligation to ensure “the inalienable, indivisible and interdependent
enjoyment and exercise of human rights, in accordance with the principle of
progressivity and without discrimination.”
“Including those rights in Cuba’s constitutional order could be taken as
a step forward in the exercise of human rights in the region, as long as the
policies, laws and structural practices that restrict the full
implementation of those safeguards from a human rights approach are
eliminated in Cuba,” said Commissioner Antonia Urrejola, IACHR Rapporteur
for Cuba. “Their interpretation and application in line with the highest
human rights standards will be crucial to be able to consider this real
progress for the Cuban people in terms of gaining fundamental rights,”
Commissioner Urrejola added.
The IACHR calls on the State to turn the constitution into a reality
based on respect for public and democratic liberties, taking measures that
ensure the free movement of ideas and thought and enable the free and equal
political participation of all Cuban citizens.
Finally, the Commission stresses the request it has made to the Cuban
State to be able to conduct its first in loco observation visit to
the country, which would allow it to monitor the human rights situation
there. The Commission will continue to monitor this constitutional reform
process in accordance with its mandate.
A principal, autonomous body of the Organization of American States (OAS), the IACHR derives its mandate from the OAS Charter and the American Convention on Human Rights. The Inter-American Commission has a mandate to promote respect for and to defend human rights in the region and acts as a consultative body to the OAS in this area. The Commission is composed of seven independent members who are elected in an individual capacity by the OAS General Assembly and who do not represent their countries of origin or residence.
No. 058/19