Nearly 600 parliamentarians from 73 countries call on the US to take Cuba off the “state-sponsor of terrorism” list

Nearly 600 parliamentarians from 73 countries across the globe have written a joint letter, coordinated and published by the Progressive International (PI), condemning Cuba’s designation by the United States as a “state-sponsor of terrorism” as “cynical, cruel, and a clear violation of international law”. In the letter, published today, Friday 20 September, the legislators call on their respective governments to “take immediate action to advocate for [the designation’s] removal.”

The US state-sponsor of terrorism designation, removed in 2015 following a thorough evaluation by the Obama Administration, was reapplied to Cuba on the very last days of the Trump presidency in 2021. Countries on the US list face extreme sanctions which hinder access to medicines and foods. The three other countries with the designation by the US government are Syria, since 1979, Iran, since 1984 and North Korea, since 2017. President Joe Biden has not removed the designation, despite promising a return to the Obama-era policy.

The signatories, brought together by the Progressive International, are for “the urgency of removing Cuba from the list of “state-sponsors of terrorism” (SSOT) in the name of dignity, decency, and the integrity of the UN Charter.” They note that according to United Nations experts, the designation has undermined “fundamental human rights, including the right to food, right to health, right to education, economic and social rights, right to life and right to development”.

Particularly notable signatories include: former president of the Belgian Workers Party Peter Mertens, Brazilian Deputy Célia Xakriabá, Canadian MP and PI Council Member Niki Ashton, Colombian Senator and PI Council Member Clara López Obregón, former general secretary of Cyprus' Progressive Party of Working People (AKEL) Andros Kyprianou, Ecuadorian Deputy Jahiren Noriega, French Deputy Arnaud Le Gall, leader of German party Die Linke Martin Schirdewan, Ghanaian MP Samuel Okudzeto Ablakwa, general secretary of the Community Party of Greece (KKE) Dimitris Koutsoumpas, former president of Guyana Donald Ramotar, First Vice President of the National Congress of Honduras Hugo Noé Pino, Indian MP John Brittas, leader of Jamaica’s People’s National Party Mark Golding, Malaysian MP Wong Chen, general secretary of Mexican party Morena Citlalli Hernández, Senegalese Deputy Guy Marius Sagna, leader of Serbia’s Movement of Socialists Bojan Torbica, leader of the Seychelles opposition Sebastian Pillay, Spanish Deputy and PI Council Member Gerardo Pisarello, leader of Spanish party Podemos Ione Belarra, leader of Sri Lanka’s National Freedom Front Wimal Weerawansa, President of Turkey’s Peoples’ Democratic Party and PI Council Member Ertuğrul Kürkcü, former leader of the UK Labour Party and PI Council Member Jeremy Corbyn.

The signatories argue that the designation “is cruel because it is designed to maximize the suffering of the people of Cuba, strangling its economy, displacing its families, and even restricting the flow of humanitarian aid.”

In May 2024, the US State Department finally removed Cuba from the list of states “not fully cooperating” with the United States on counterterrorism efforts. However, the letter argues that “this is not enough” as “Cuba continues to suffer as a result of its cynical, cruel, and illegal exclusion from the international economy.”

The Progressive International-coordinated letter follows 35 former Heads of State and Government writing to Joe Biden asking him to remove Cuba from the list as he enters his final months in office.

Full text of the letter

We, the undersigned parliamentarians from across the globe, condemn the designation of Cuba as a “state-sponsor of terrorism” and call on our respective governments to take immediate action to advocate for its removal.

The United States' designation of Cuba as a “state-sponsor of terrorism” is cynical, cruel, and a clear violation of international law.

The designation, removed in 2015 following a thorough evaluation by the Obama administration, was reapplied to Cuba on the very last days of the Trump presidency as a final act in his campaign of economic warfare against the island.

As a candidate, Joe Biden pledged to restore the diplomatic relationship fostered by his Democratic predecessor. But as president, Biden reneged — even after the Colombian government dropped the extradition charges against members of its National Liberation Army (ELN): the original justification for Trump to reapply the “state sponsor” designation.

The designation is therefore cynical because Cuba — far from sponsoring terrorism — has served as a key broker for peace talks between the Colombian government, the ELN, and the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC). The present talks mark one decade since Cuba convened the member-states of CELAC to declare the region a Zone of Peace, “based on respect for the principles and rules of International Law.”

The designation is cruel because it is designed to maximize the suffering of the people of Cuba, strangling its economy, displacing its families, and even restricting the flow of humanitarian aid. According to United Nations experts, the designation has undermined “[f]undamental human rights, including the right to food, right to health, right to education, economic and social rights, right to life and right to development”.

Finally, the designation is illegal because it undermines “the principle of sovereign equality of States, the prohibition to intervene into domestic affairs of states and the principle of peaceful settlement of international disputes,” according to UN legal experts. The extreme, extraterritorial sanctions triggered by the designation thus mark a clear violation of international law.

In May 2024, the US State Department finally removed Cuba from the list of states that are “not fully cooperating” with the United States on counterterrorism efforts. But this is not enough. Cuba continues to suffer as a result of its cynical, cruel, and illegal exclusion from the international economy.

With this letter, we underline the urgency of removing Cuba from the list of “state-sponsors of terrorism” in the name of dignity, decency, and the integrity of the UN Charter — and call on our governments to use all diplomatic means to redress this grave ongoing injustice.

(Cubaminrex)

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