.
“The United Nations Human Rights Council formally condemned the U.S., called on all member states to break the sanctions, and even began discussing the reparations Washington should pay to Venezuela.”
3/27/20, “With a Quarter of the World’s Population Under US Sanctions, Countries Appeal to UN to Intervene,” Mint Press News, Alan MacLeod
“Eight countries, representing around one-quarter of all humanity, say that Washington’s actions are undermining their response to the COVID–19 pandemic sweeping the planet.”
“The
governments of China, Cuba, Iran, Nicaragua, North Korea, Russia,
Syria, and Venezuela – all under sanctions from the United States – sent a joint statement to the United Nations Secretary-General, the UN’s High Commissioner on Human Rights and the Director-General of the World Health Organization calling
for an end to the unilateral American economic blockade, as they are,
“illegal and blatantly violate international law and the charter of the
United Nations.”
The eight countries,
representing around one-quarter of humanity, say that Washington’s
actions are undermining their response to the COVID–19 pandemic sweeping
the planet. “The destructive impact of said measures at the national level, plus their extraterritorial implication, together with the phenomenon of over-compliance and the
fear for ‘secondary sanctions,’ hinder the ability of national
governments” in procuring even basic medical equipment and supplies,
including coronavirus test kits and medicine. It is a “hard
if not impossible deed for those countries who are currently facing the
application of unilateral coercive measures,” to cope, they conclude.
The letter was shared on Twitter by Joaquin Perez, Venezuela’s Permanent Ambassador to the UN.
“That
U.S. sanctions are “blatant violations of international law,” the
letter states, is not in doubt. As the American Special Rapporteur to
the UN, Alfred de Zayas, notes, only sanctions expressly verified and imposed collectively by the UN Security Council can be considered legal; any unilateral punishment is, by definition, illegal. De Zayas, a legal scholar, notes that sanctions are tantamount to a “collective punishment” against a population, an explicit violation of multiple articles of the UN Charter, the foundation of international law.
De Zayas traveled to Venezuela
last year, describing the U.S. sanctions as akin to a medieval siege and
accusing the Trump administration of “crimes against humanity.” The United Nations Human Rights Council formally condemned the U.S., called on all member states to break the sanctions, and even began discussing the reparations Washington should pay to Venezuela, noting that Trump’s sanctions were designed to “disproportionately affect the poor and most vulnerable.” None of this was reported in any major American media outlet at the time.
The sanctions meant that Venezuela was unable to import key medicines for conditions like cancer and diabetes, leading to scores of deaths. A 2019 report
from the Washington-based Center for Economic Policy Research
conservatively estimated the sanctions killed 40,000 Venezuelans between
mid-2017 and 2018.
Yesterday, the Trump administration turned the screw tighter, putting out a bizarre hit on President Nicolas Maduro, offering $15 million to anybody who could bring him to them in chains. Other
key figures like Minister of Defense Vladimir Padrino and Head of the
Constituent Assembly Diosdado Cabello also had bounties placed on their
heads, supposedly because they were part of a drug trafficking ring.
The U.S. is also turning up the heat on COVID-19 plagued Iran. Senior Washington insiders like Newt Gingrich are dreaming that their sanctions will finally bring about regime change in the Islamic Republic. Sanctions led to the Iranian rial losing 80 percent of its value, with both food prices and unemployment doubling.
While medicine is technically exempt from sanctions, in reality,
Washington has frightened away any nation or corporation from doing
business with Tehran. Even as coronavirus was raging through the
country, no nation was willing to donate even basic supplies to Iran.
Eventually, the World Health Organization stepped in and directly
supplied it with provisions. An October report from Human Rights Watch noted that “the overbroad and burdensome nature of the US sanctions has led banks and companies around the world to pull back from humanitarian trade with Iran,
leaving Iranians who have rare or complicated diseases unable to get
the medicine and treatment they require.” At least 2,378 Iranians have
died of COVID-19, many of them needlessly….
The sanctioned countries warn that Trump’s actions are killing not only Americans at home but people all over the world. “We
cannot allow for political calculations to get in the way of saving
human lives,” they conclude. However, precisely because the U.S. has so
much power on the world stage, it is unlikely their protestations will get them very far.”
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