Decolonization in the Caribbean #14: UN Delegations
Chamorros and others from Guam pushing for the island's decolonization first began visiting the United Nations in the early 1980s. This was after witnessing the United Nations and their role in assisting the other islands in Micronesia in their decolonization, and noticing that Guam and the Chamorro people were being left behind. A visiting mission from the United Nations to Guam in 1979 helped connect the local struggles to the larger international community, where such conversations about independence and self-governance were not taboo, but rather normal and more importantly, necessary.
Part of the postwar strategy of the United States was to develop the islands in Micronesia into a buffer zone, to put space between its potential enemies in Asia. This meant prioritizing for two decades the military interests of the US over the interests or desires of the people in the region. This manifested most clearly in the form of security clearance requirements for those coming in and out of the Marianas. As politicians at the time were apt to grumble about quietly and rarely broach openly, everyone going in and out of the islands at the time, had to be approved or cleared by the US Navy. This meant a tourism industry and even simple economic development was extremely difficult for the island.
Guam by this time had been a colony of the US for five or six decades, and any connections to the rest of the world were strained or diminished completely. Take for instance something that is constantly discussed in Guam, the Japanese occupation of the island during the war, but which is scarcely discussed from the Chamorro perspective, even if Chamorros are constantly featured in the discussion. As Guam developed in the postwar context, Japan had gone from an enemy of the US, to one of its main allies. As the security clearance for the island was lifted, Japan was a primary option in terms of enticing tourists. This made sense if we consider Guam to just be a footnote of the US, a reflection of it, a minute emulator in the Western Pacific, with no real substance of its own. This is an extension of the saying that when the US sneezes, Guam gets a cold.
But this represented a problem with the trauma and pain that Chamorros experienced in World War II at the hands of the Japanese. A handful of Chamorros were interviewed at the time when Guam's tourism industry was born and some of them seemed perturbed at the idea that the island was now supposed to welcome with flower leis, those who just a generation before had come with swords and grenades. There is nothing wrong with reconciliation with Japan, but the problem is that the reconciliation was not Chamorro-driven, but rather something Guam was pulled into by US interests and local elites who were determined to follow whatever course the Mother Country allowed them. This is one reason why the antagonism leftover from World War II became directed more forcefully and openly towards the Chamorros from the northern islands, because no space was created for Chamorros on Guam to deal with their feelings towards the Japanese. There are a few stories of young people down South throwing rocks at Japanese tour buses, but in truth, Southern children were known to do that to any car driving that might be driving through their village.
We see this detached dynamic continue up until today, and it is on the one hand understandable, but nonetheless frustrating. US interests inundate the island, but at the same time, the US speaks for the island in all international forums, explicitly or implicitly claiming to represent our interests.
One of the appeals of the United Nations and its bodies was that it allowed Guam to have a forum for speaking, albeit symbolically, directly to the world. In so many other ways, the island is subsumed in American power and is barely perceptible in any way except as the tip of America's spear or where America's Day begins, but by traveling to the UN and testifying there, it represented a different possible future for Guam, where its identity, its interest, its ability to determine its destiny not be lost in the vagaries of American power. This is why at different points over the past four decades, delegations from Guam have been formed to travel to testify before the UN Fourth Committee in New York about the situation in Guam. It is an important form of outreach, which I myself got to participate in, when I traveled there with two others to testify in 2007. There are some small discussions about the possibility of reviving this strategy, as the last significant delegation to the UN from Guam was in 2010. The UN release on that visit is pasted below:
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UN General Assembly
Special Committee on Decolonization Urged to Visit Guam as Petitioners Deplore Militarization of Non-Self-Governing Territory
Hearings also Held on Questions of Western Sahara, New Caledonia, Turks and Caicos Islands, United States Virgin Islands
Part of the postwar strategy of the United States was to develop the islands in Micronesia into a buffer zone, to put space between its potential enemies in Asia. This meant prioritizing for two decades the military interests of the US over the interests or desires of the people in the region. This manifested most clearly in the form of security clearance requirements for those coming in and out of the Marianas. As politicians at the time were apt to grumble about quietly and rarely broach openly, everyone going in and out of the islands at the time, had to be approved or cleared by the US Navy. This meant a tourism industry and even simple economic development was extremely difficult for the island.
Guam by this time had been a colony of the US for five or six decades, and any connections to the rest of the world were strained or diminished completely. Take for instance something that is constantly discussed in Guam, the Japanese occupation of the island during the war, but which is scarcely discussed from the Chamorro perspective, even if Chamorros are constantly featured in the discussion. As Guam developed in the postwar context, Japan had gone from an enemy of the US, to one of its main allies. As the security clearance for the island was lifted, Japan was a primary option in terms of enticing tourists. This made sense if we consider Guam to just be a footnote of the US, a reflection of it, a minute emulator in the Western Pacific, with no real substance of its own. This is an extension of the saying that when the US sneezes, Guam gets a cold.
But this represented a problem with the trauma and pain that Chamorros experienced in World War II at the hands of the Japanese. A handful of Chamorros were interviewed at the time when Guam's tourism industry was born and some of them seemed perturbed at the idea that the island was now supposed to welcome with flower leis, those who just a generation before had come with swords and grenades. There is nothing wrong with reconciliation with Japan, but the problem is that the reconciliation was not Chamorro-driven, but rather something Guam was pulled into by US interests and local elites who were determined to follow whatever course the Mother Country allowed them. This is one reason why the antagonism leftover from World War II became directed more forcefully and openly towards the Chamorros from the northern islands, because no space was created for Chamorros on Guam to deal with their feelings towards the Japanese. There are a few stories of young people down South throwing rocks at Japanese tour buses, but in truth, Southern children were known to do that to any car driving that might be driving through their village.
We see this detached dynamic continue up until today, and it is on the one hand understandable, but nonetheless frustrating. US interests inundate the island, but at the same time, the US speaks for the island in all international forums, explicitly or implicitly claiming to represent our interests.
One of the appeals of the United Nations and its bodies was that it allowed Guam to have a forum for speaking, albeit symbolically, directly to the world. In so many other ways, the island is subsumed in American power and is barely perceptible in any way except as the tip of America's spear or where America's Day begins, but by traveling to the UN and testifying there, it represented a different possible future for Guam, where its identity, its interest, its ability to determine its destiny not be lost in the vagaries of American power. This is why at different points over the past four decades, delegations from Guam have been formed to travel to testify before the UN Fourth Committee in New York about the situation in Guam. It is an important form of outreach, which I myself got to participate in, when I traveled there with two others to testify in 2007. There are some small discussions about the possibility of reviving this strategy, as the last significant delegation to the UN from Guam was in 2010. The UN release on that visit is pasted below:
*************************
UN General Assembly
Special Committee on
Decolonization (C24)
7th Meeting (AM)
Special Committee on Decolonization Urged to Visit Guam as Petitioners Deplore Militarization of Non-Self-Governing Territory
Speaking out against the militarization of Guam
by the United States, several petitioners today called upon members of
the Special Committee on Decolonization to visit the Non-Self-Governing
Territory and see the situation for themselves as soon as possible.
Many called attention to the release of an
11,000-page draft environmental impact statement by the United States,
which the people of Guam had been given 90 days to study and comment
on. Hope Antoinette Cristobal urged the Special Committee to study the
document, which was “in direct violation of various international human
rights instruments, including United Nations resolutions and
declarations”.
Rima Ilarishigh Peter Miles, speaking on behalf
of Women for Genuine Security, noted that United States Navy activities
carried out on the island had gravely impacted the environment, human
health and the welfare of the territorial government. Considering such
challenges, she stressed the position that “the United States does not
care what it destroys as long as no one knows about it”.
Asserting that the United Nations must not
allow negative impacts to further block the process of decolonization,
many petitioners requested that the Special Committee declare the
militarization of Guam to be a major impediment to Guam’s exercise of
its right to self-determination. They also requested that the Special
Committee ensure that United States congressional appropriations and
other United States military projects be put on hold until past
injustices were remedied, current adverse impacts were negated and the
potential for future adverse impacts completely removed.
The Special Committee — known also as the
Special Committee of 24 or formally as the Special Committee on the
Situation with Regard to the Implementation of the Declaration on the
Granting of Independence to Colonial Countries and Peoples — also heard
petitioners on the Non-Self-Governing Territories of Western Sahara, New
Caledonia, Turks and Caicos Islands and the United States Virgin
Islands.
On the question of New Caledonia, Caroline
Machoro-Reignier of Front de libération nationale kanak socialiste
underscored major challenges that remained despite progress made in the
wake of the landmark 1998 Nouméa Accord. Those included serious
economic and social imbalances between the Territory’s Northern and
Southern Provinces. Emphasizing the inevitably of New Caledonia’s
independence, she called for United Nations support, particularly legal
assistance in developing a constitution.
As the Special Committee turned to the question
of the Turks and Caicos Islands, two petitioners voiced deep concern
about the process by which a new territorial constitution was to be
created. Wendal Swann, Chairman of the All-Party Commission on the
Constitution and Electoral Reform, said that the Government of the
United Kingdom had appointed a constitutional consultant to catalogue
the views of the Territory’s people — after deciding to suspend specific
portions of the current charter.
Benjamin Roberts of the Turks and Caicos Forum
said the appointment had incited fears among the Territory’s people that
their interests would not truly be heard, and that the United Kingdom
would impose a decree on the islands if they ratified a constitution
that did not reflect the administering Power’s views.
Also taking part in today’s proceedings were
representatives of Cuba, Venezuela, Bolivia, Nicaragua, Chile, Fiji and
Papua New Guinea.
The Special Committee will reconvene at 10 a.m.
on Wednesday, 23 June, to continue its hearing of petitioners on the
question of the United States Virgin Islands.
Background
The Special Committee on Decolonization met
today to hear petitioners on the questions of Western Sahara, New
Caledonia, Guam, Turks and Caicos Islands, and the United States Virgin
Islands.
Question of Western Sahara
PEDRO NUÑEZ MOSQUERA ( Cuba) said that
in light of the Saharan people’s struggles over 40 years to gain
independence, the conflict in the Territory should be included on the
General Assembly’s agenda as a direct responsibility of the United
Nations. The Special Committee had a key role to play in fulfilling
that aim, he said, noting that the people of Western Sahara were the
only ones who could choose their future freely and without pressure or
conditions. The United Nations had adopted more than 40 resolutions
since 1963, when Western Sahara had been added to the list of
Non-Self-Governing Territories, and several rounds of discussion had
taken place on the issue, he said, emphasizing that all parties involved
must step up their determination to continue their efforts.
The self-determination of the Saharan people
must be guaranteed within the framework of the United Nations Charter
and resolution 1514 (XV), he said, stressing further that they needed
the support of the entire international community. To that end, Cuba
had contributed as much as possible to the development of the Saharan
people, particularly in the area of education, he said, affirming that
his country would continue to support the development of a just and
definitive solution to the situation of Western Sahara, whose people
would always be able to count on Cuba.
JORGE VALERO BRICEÑO (Venezuela),
stressing his country’s solidarity with and commitment to the
self-determination efforts of Western Sahara, said his country’s
Constitution enshrined the principles of respect for the inalienable
rights to independence, territorial integrity and self-determination, to
which strict adherence must be exercised. On the basis of those
principles, Venezuela had extended diplomatic recognition to the Sahrawi
Arab Democratic Republic, and therefore reiterated its request for
similar United Nations support.
He called for the strict implementation of
resolution 1514 (XV) and urged the Special Committee to consider the
situation with more determination, taking into account the need to
promote justice and the human rights for the Saharan people. Expressing
hope that negotiations would ensure the implementation of relevant
appropriate resolutions, he said they could only succeed if carried out
within the framework of the Charter and resolution 1514 (XV). In
addition, Venezuela reaffirmed, as per resolution 1514 (XV), the
necessity of eliminating colonialism, racial discrimination and human
rights violations, and called upon administering Powers to take the
necessary action to ensure the exercise of self-determination.
AHMED BOUKHARI, Popular Front for the Liberation of Saguia el-Hamra and Rio de Oro
(Polisario Front), said 18 years had passed since the United Nations
had endorsed, in 1991, the plan for a self-determination referendum in
Western Sahara, which was still to be held. The process had been
deterred by Morocco on the basis of friendships it had forged in the
Security Council, particularly with France, which would provide it with
impunity to continue its destructive efforts. Morocco still believed
that it could involve the Council in gravely altering the Saharan
people’s fundamental basic right to self-determination. None of the
endeavours carried out, from the 1997 Houston Agreement to the 2003
Baker Plan, to efforts by Christopher Ross, the Secretary-General’s
Personal Envoy, had managed to overcome the intransigence of the
occupying Power, he said.
Morocco had incorporated new arguments and
pretexts to create new alliances within the Council in exchange for
hopes of realizing the final annexation of Western Sahara, he
continued. That would signify the introduction of a new and curious
doctrine that would enable all those participating in it to annex
neighbouring territories, he warned. That pseudo-solution of “autonomy
of Moroccan sovereignty”, which Morocco had formulated in 2007 and set
as a precondition for advancing the current negotiations, implied
forcing the Saharan people to renounce the option of independence and
integrate into the occupying Power. It would not be difficult for
members of the Special Committee to consider that pseudo-solution as a
grave rejection of the principle of self-determination, established by
the United Nations in resolution 1514 (XV) and defined in resolution
1541 (XV).
Morocco continued to negate the 1991 United
Nations decision, he said, adding that it also continued illegally to
exploit Western Sahara’s natural resources and to violate the Saharan
people’s human rights under the eyes and ears of the United Nations
Mission for the Referendum in Western Sahara (MINURSO). There was no
indication that Morocco would change its position in the near future,
he said, noting that the United Nations would fail to address the
situation of the last African territory on the Special Committee’s
agenda. The Moroccan case could have represented success on
decolonization, but instead, it had become a symbol of protracted
failure. No one could resign themselves to a fait accompli predicated
on false and territorial appetites, he stressed.
He said Morocco was continuing the expansionist
policies of Mohamed Allal al‑Fassi, leader of the Istiqlal Party, who
had sought, since independence in 1956, to forge a “Greater Morocco”
extending into Senegal and swallowing up all of Western Sahara,
Mauritania and parts of Algeria and Mali. The region had seen no peace
since 1975, and had even moved further away from it due to Morocco’s
decision to base its demands on ancient history. Failure to follow the
road to peace, as instructed by the United Nations, should not be
permitted, he said, adding that the Special Committee could play a large
role in replacing injury and violence with a complete process for the
peaceful decolonization of the last African colony on its agenda.
More than ever, the Special Committee had the
chance to find out for itself what was happening in the Territory, he
said, recalling that its last visit to Western Sahara had taken place
35 years ago. There was no valid or convincing reason to object to a
second visit until the question of decolonization was resolved. The
Special Committee had a right to request and receive true and
appropriate information about the situation in the Territory, but
Morocco was refusing to provide it, claiming that it had no colonies,
only “provinces”. Sooner or later international law would prevail in
Western Sahara, he said.
Calling for a pooling of efforts to convince
Morocco to cooperate with the United Nations on ending the unsustainable
colonial situation that had handicapped the future of the entire
region, bringing instability and insecurity, he said all countries of
the region had been subjected to European colonization, and had
subsequently spent years building their own independent futures. “We
cannot be an exception to the general rule,” he emphasized, denouncing
Morocco for trying to return to times of injury, violence and
territorial bullying based on ancient history. The only way forward was
through a democratic solution in which the Saharan people would be
masters of their own destiny, he said.
When asked by the representative of Bolivia
about a solution to the conflict, Mr. BOUKHARI said all the parties
concerned had agreed on a solution “a long time”. The consensus had
been that the Saharan people could decide whether they preferred to
remain part of Morocco or to become independent. However, there had
been a deviation from that process towards attempts to legitimize an
unacceptable situation, he said, noting that, during informal
negotiations, Morocco had taken “a step back”. In light of that,
Mr. Ross hoped to consider a new negotiating round in efforts to move
forward. The only solution was to apply the already agreed-upon
principle of self-determination for Western Sahara, he said, noting
that any other method could lead to “a dead end”.
Responding to a question by the representative of Nicaragua
about the Special Committee’s role, he said that, as long as the
decolonization process continued in the Territory, the Special Committee
would remain involved and use all the means at its disposal. He said
he did not understand the rationale behind objections to the Special
Committee visiting Western Sahara in order for members to view the
situation for themselves. It should visit, since preventing such a
visit would not help to strengthen the competence of its work.
Asked by the representative of Venezuela
about the difficulties of the decolonization process, he said the
current situation in Western Sahara was the result of destruction that
had begun in 2009. Considering the risk that a lack of action could
become a shield for the status quo, he urged the United Nations to take
another look at the situation in Western Sahara so as to avoid a
tragedy that would take place in the Organization’s name.
DONATUS KEITH ST. AIMEE (Saint Lucia),
Chair of the Special Committee, said it was not possible to have two
separate solutions, adding that he would seek to move the process
forward through talks between the parties concerned. He expressed
concern that the approaches taken thus far had not produced results and
he would work towards a different approach, if needed.
The representative of Chile said it
was important to keep the matter on the agenda in the interest of the
right to self-determination. The Special Committee must also raise the
question of beginning a third International Decade for the Eradication
of Colonialism.
The representative of Nicaragua supported Chile’s proposal.
Question of New Caledonia
CAROLINE MACHORO-REIGNIER, Front de lib ération nationale kanak socialiste,
said the Kanak people were on the path towards achieving their
destiny. While it had been difficult and bloody in light of revolts,
war and assassinations, the Kanak people had also experienced victories,
noting that New Caledonia was becoming financially autonomous and
economically viable. The 1998 Nouméa Accord towards a transfer of power
from France to New Caledonia had led to a territorial government
based on solidarity and dialogue, she said.
Despite the positive progress made, however,
major issues remained, she said, highlighting the substantial economic
and social imbalances that had led to the overdevelopment of the
Southern Province and the underdevelopment of the Northern
Province. Moreover, high unemployment rates had begun to attract
private interests that could potentially call into question certain
policies aimed at emancipating the Territory’s indigenous people, she
said, noting that considerable migration, primarily of people from
Europe, could lead to social destabilization. Such issues could have a
negative impact, particularly on the transfer of competencies and the
related training, and on the establishment of the people’s citizenship
and employment priorities.
Expressing concern that the Nouméa process was
not moving as rapidly as expected, she underscored the Territory’s
willingness to confront all challenges, including the need for regular
evaluation of public policies conducted within the Nouméa framework. An
independent New Caledonia was inevitable, she stressed, expressing
hope that the United Nations would continue to support the Territory and
to help it achieve its goals. She requested legal assistance from the
Special Committee to help the Territory develop a constitution.
Responding to a question from the representative of Cuba
concerning economic and social imbalances, she cited several examples,
noting that 85 per cent of total mining revenue was generated in the
South. In that social context, 85 per cent of households in the south
had access to running water, as compared to 65 per cent in the north,
she said, adding that efforts were being made to reduce those serious
geographical imbalances.
Also making statements on the question of New Caledonia were the representatives of Fiji and Papua New Guinea.
Question of Guam
RIMA ILARISHIGH PETER MILES, Women for Genuine Security,
called for immediate United Nations action to advance the protection
and fulfilment of the right to self-determination of Guam’s Chamoru
people. That right was currently under threat in light of the
continuing avoidance of the issue on the part of the United States, as
well as recent actions which contradicted the terms of that
administering Power’s obligation to the Chamoru people.
She said the presence of the United States Navy
in Guam had brought about extremely negative impacts, including
environmental deterioration, the drying up of major freshwater sources
and a population boom of 80,000, which had created a financial burden
for the territorial government. Such challenges warranted the Special
Committee’s support in demanding that the United States take no further
action in militarizing the Mariana Islands, she said.
“The United States does not care what it
destroys as long as no one knows about it,” she stressed, noting that
the militarization of Guam was a direct impediment to the right of
self-determination. As for the severe health implications of
militarization for the Chamoru people, she tearfully called upon the
United Nations to send a visiting mission to survey the situation and to
challenge protocol in such matters when the administering Power was
non-cooperative. It was critical, to protect Guam’s land and resources,
and to help the Territory achieve the highest possible level of
economic self-reliance, environmental protection, as well as social and
educational development, she said.
HOPE ANTOINETTE CRISTOBAL said Guam’s
indigenous people continued to suffer social, cultural and environmental
annihilation at the hands of their United States oppressors. The
Chamorro people were dying and suffering at disproportionate rates in
comparison with their United States counterparts, she said, noting that
their health concerns were similar to those in New Caledonia, which
suffered “an overrepresentation” of depression, anxiety, alcohol and
drug use, and violence. Guam had some of the world’s highest suicide
rates, and the hyper-militarization plans of the United States would
exacerbate those problems. As the administering Power for more than six
decades, the United States must bear responsibility for Guam’s
tragic invisibility, which had resulted in inadequate public-health
resources.
She recalled that, in 2005, the people of Guam
had been notified through the media that some 7,000 United States
marines were being transferred to the Territory from Okinawa, Japan.
The United States Department of Defense had refused to give any further
information on the matter, citing its plans as “tentative” until the
release of a draft environmental impact statement. The people of Guam
had been given only 90 days to study and comment on the 11,000-page
document, she said. Six months after its release, the territorial
government was struggling to get United States funding to deal with
the anticipated impact on water, power and sewer infrastructure, as well
as seaport facilities contained in the plans.
Emphasizing that it behoved the Special
Committee to study the document, which was in direct violation of
various international human rights instruments, including United Nations
resolutions and declarations, she said the United States was making
plans to dredge 287,327 square metres of coral reefs in Apra Harbour,
Guam’s only natural deep-water harbour, which already contained high
traces of arsenic, lead, copper, mercury and tin, among other harmful
chemicals.
She went on to say that traditional lands
comprising a recently designated national historic preservation site and
sacred areas near Mount LamLam had been scheduled for land takeovers
through coercive procedures or outright purchase. There was no
indication that the United States would adhere to its responsibilities
under United Nations resolutions and treaties, and Guam’s people would
suffer irreparable damage as a result, she added.
She asked the Special Committee to declare,
unequivocally, that the militarization of Guam was a major impediment to
the Decolonization Declaration, and that Guam’s separate and distinct
status under the United Nations Charter should exist until the Chamorro
people had exercised their right to self-determination, without external
interference. She asked the Special Committee to request a United
Nations visiting mission to Guam as soon as possible.
JULIE GILGOFF, a Guam journalist, read out a
statement on behalf of Senator Vicente Cabrera Pangelinan, saying that
the people of Guam wanted to resolve their political relationship with
the United States before ceding any more control of their lands and
oceans, or the rights of the people. The Special Committee must advance
the self-determination process immediately, because recent decisions by
the administering Power diluted that right daily. The decision to
increase the population base in Guam, a Non-Self-Governing Territory,
contravened the principles of decolonization, and was being carried out
in a disingenuous, secretive manner. In the United States own words,
the planned increased military presence was the most massive military
undertaking in the movement of military personnel since the Second World
War.
She said that, in the past couple of years, the
Senator’s office had been registering native inhabitants and their
descendants. In an effort to increase the number of eligible voters for
a decolonization plebiscite, the Senator had sponsored legislation and
public law 30-102 to accept the registration rolls of participants in
the land trust programme, which had the same eligibility criteria as the
decolonization registry. Guam was seeking financial and technical
resources from the administering authority to implement an education
campaign to adequately inform the Chamorro about the plebiscite vote,
she added.
Calling on the United Nations to give the
petition to Member States, particularly the United States, and to
demand the administering Power’s compliance with it, she said Guam’s
inalienable right to self-determination must be upheld in the face of
the threat posed by military expansion. The Fourth Committee (Special
Political and Decolonization) must immediately seek the full support of
its Members and the international community. It must be allowed to send
a visiting mission to Guam to affirm the wishes of the Chamorro people
for a decolonization plebiscite and attest to the urgency of those
wishes.
TRESSA DIAZ, Fuetsan Famalao’an,
expressed concern about the impact of militarization on the island’s
social infrastructure and the livelihood of its women and children.
The United States Department of Defense was working behind closed doors
to prepare a final impact statement, with view to adopt it at the end
of August. Congress had refused to hold an open hearing to air the
concerns of people whose lives would be affected forever by the military
expansion, she said.
Emphasizing that the United States military had
long since displaced generations of Chamorro families and replaced much
of their agricultural, hunting and ranching activities with Government
and military employment, she said many local people were unaware that
Guam’s land, water and food were still contaminated. Mustard gas, PCBs
and radiation continued to plague the area and its food supply,
especially the waters off Orote Point in southern Guam and the
surrounding Cocos Islands, due to military dumping. She urged the
Special Committee to conduct a hearing on Guam to see the substandard
living conditions of the island’s people. The United Nations must not
allow more negative impacts to precede determination of the island’s
political status.
Congressional appropriations and more military
projects should be put on hold until past injustices were remedied,
current adverse impacts were negated and the potential for future
adverse impacts completely removed, she stressed, calling on the Special
Committee to give top priority to the Chamorro people’s right to
self-determination. It should investigate the administering Power’s
compliance or non-compliance with its Charter obligations under Article
73 to promote the socio-economic development and preserve the cultural
identity of Non-Self-Governing Territories. She also asked the Special
Committee to recommend that the General Assembly pass a resolution
authorizing a United Nations visiting mission to examine the impact of
the military on the Special Committee’s work, as well as a resolution
reaffirming that the Question of Guam was one of decolonization that
remained to be completed.
ANDREA SANTOS, We Are Guahan, said her
organization was deeply alarmed by the injustices proposed under United
States militarization plans. The Guam Environmental Protection Agency
had given the military’s impact statement its lowest possible rating,
calling it the most poorly constructed impact statement it had ever
evaluated. Noting that United States plans had rendered the people of
Guam powerless over their destiny, she said: “The political freedom,
environmental safety and cultural legacy we leave to future generations
is one that is ultimately decided by those who view their home as
nothing more than a gas station or military training ground in the
Pacific.”
The basic necessities for maintaining or
creating a self-sustaining, empowered, healthy population were
threatened by the United States plans, she said, adding that
militarization would create a water shortfall of 2.3 million gallons per
day for people living outside the properties controlled by the
Department of Defense. The island’s already underfunded and
understaffed education system would not be able to absorb the projected
influx of 8,000 students.
According to local economists, United States
projections of economic gains due to militarization had been inflated by
more than 118 per cent, she said. Projected tax revenues would not be
enough to support the 80,000 new residents who would arrive in 2014.
Moreover, already low living standards would deteriorate further, and
the predicted housing shortage through 2014 would drive up house prices
while increasing homelessness and overcrowding. The impact on the coral
reefs protecting the island from storms and earthquakes would be
impacted in an unprecedented way, she said, adding that noise and
pollution would also increase. The decolonization of Guam should take
place without the administering Power and with the cooperation of the
United Nations, she stressed, calling for an investigation into the
administering Power’s compliance with the Charter.
The representative of Bolivia asked the extent to which the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous People was known among Guam’s population.
Ms. CRISTOBAL said only a few people were aware
of it, and for decades Guam’s residents had had a “colonial mindset”.
They had only become aware of their island’s true status when the
United States had announced plans for hyper-militarization, she said,
emphasizing that it was imperative that the United Nations establish a
presence in Guam and show its people that there was international
concern to decolonize the Territory.
Mr. ST. AIMEE (Saint Lucia), Special
Committee Chair, said United Nations agencies could disseminate
information on the Declaration, adding that they had a mandate to
provide assistance to local populations, such as the inhabitants of
Guam.
Question of Turks and Caicos Islands
BENJAMIN ROBERTS, Turks and Caicos Forum,
noted that, while the islands had experienced unprecedented growth in
the last 40 years, rapid development had led to increased crime, social
ills and corruption. Financial challenges had been caused by a lack of
accountability on the part of elected officials and civil servants, as
well as “horrendous oversight by the British”, he said, noting that
since the administering Power’s installation of an interim territorial
government, more people had experienced financial hardship and felt
disempowered.
While the United Kingdom was not entirely to
blame, he stressed that it had not taken the necessary actions to remedy
the Territory’s situation, as it had initially proposed. Recently, the
interim territorial government had contracted a constitutional
consultant to catalogue the people’s ideas for constitutional reform.
The resulting document would be a constitution that would in turn become
the law of the land prior to the end of the two-year interim government
period, making way for fresh elections, he said.
He said major concerns had emerged about the
United Kingdom’s use of a constitutional consultant, with many fearing
that she would answer only to her employer rather than champion the
islanders’ interests. The United Kingdom could then simply decree the
document, which would be a blatant violation of the people’s human
rights. The document must not become law until it had been ratified by
the elected territorial government, ensuring the consent of the people,
he stressed.
WENDAL SWANN, Chairman of the All-Party Commission on the Constitution and Electoral Reform, Turks and Caicos Islands,
said certain challenges facing the islanders were a result of the
current constitutional state of affairs. The Governor was considered a
“constitutional dictator”, holding all authority on the basis of a
decision by the United Kingdom. By the same decision, parts of the
Turks and Caicos constitution had been suspended, he said, adding that
Robin Auld — a former Chief Justice appointed by the administering Power
to conduct a Commission of Inquiry into possible ministerial corruption
— had recommended the suspension without citing any perceived
constitutional failures.
Following that recommendation, the United
Kingdom had appointed Kate Sullivan to run consultations with the
people, he continued. Referring to certain provisions of the
constitution that would definitely be changed, Ms. Sullivan had excluded
the media from her meetings, thus proving the process of consultation
to be “more a sham than anything reliable”. He stressed that, unless
such a process was challenged, its acceptance by the administering Power
as a legitimate consultation with the people would nullify their
voices. To prevent that, the Territory’s political leaders had
appointed an independent commission to reflect the views of the people.
The Governor did not and could not represent the interests of the
people, he emphasized, pointing out that the suspension of the
constitution had only served to make the people leaderless.
When asked how elections could be held without a
constitution, Mr. Swann reiterated that public consultations were being
held, and it was to be hoped that afterwards, the United Kingdom would
consider the independent Commission’s report as well as Ms. Sullivan’s.
Noting that the current constitution was simply an order in Council, he
said he hoped all parties involved could eventually accept a new one.
With regard to the elections, Mr. Roberts called on the Special
Committee to provide the Territory with assistance to ensure that the
new constitution was ratified by the people. The Special Committee’s
support in that matter could help prevent an undesired decree by the
United Kingdom, he said.
Question of United States Virgin Islands
GERARD LUZ AMWUR JAMES, President of the Fifth Constitutional Convention of the United States Virgin Islands,
updated the Special Committee on the Territory’s constitution-making
efforts, saying it was making its fifth attempt to draft a locally
written charter to replace the 1954 Revised Organic Act, which had been
written by the administering Power and served as the governing document
in lieu of a constitution. The proposed constitution had been adopted
by the Fifth Constitutional Convention last May following extensive fact
gathering in public meetings throughout the Territory.
The proposed constitution had been adopted by
the required two-thirds majority vote, and had been forwarded in
December to the administering Power, he said. Written under the present
non self-governing territorial status, the document was not intended to
alter that status, but rather to organize “internal governance
arrangements”, he said, adding that he had recently led a delegation to
Washington, D.C., to present the document to two congressional
committees, followed by a presentation of the administering Power’s
views. Congress had asked the Convention to reconvene and consider the
administering Power’s objections, he said.
He recalled that, during his statement to the
United States Senate’s Energy and Natural Resource Committee, he had
noted that the proposed constitution had been drafted by and for the
people of the United States Virgin Islands, and was not a proposal to
govern other people. Several negative comments had been made about
certain provisions of the document, he noted, by people who had not
“worn the shoes” of those who had suffered the indignity of being
externally governed. They had not examined the evidence that had led
the Convention to adopt the necessary provisions to maintain generations
of local people working hard to own property that would provide life
for themselves and their descendants.
The critics had not reviewed the evidence that
showed that those with Virgin Islands ancestry, primarily people of
African descent, had been devastated by the administering Power’s lack
of support, he continued. For example, half of the local population had
left the Territory, an exodus that must stop, he said, stressing that
the extinction of the native people was not an acceptable option. Young
people were leaving because their parents could not afford to pass on
to them homes and businesses that had been in the family for decades.
Home values had increased exponentially due to external factors, causing
tax hikes well beyond the ability of local families to pay.
One of the objections to the proposed
constitution had been over any meaningful reference to the native
population, he recalled. However, such recognition should not cause
suspicion or be challenged as improper, since it was the administering
Power that had recognized and defined the native population, pursuant to
the 1917 treaty transferring the Territory from Denmark to the United
States. Subsequent citizenship and nationality laws of the
administering Power imposed in 1927 and 1940 confirmed that recognition,
he said, adding that the provisions of the proposed constitution
granting certain benefits to the native population were consistent with
policies, agreements and treaties executed by the administering Power.
The document went further, however, by embracing all those born in the
Territory, including the children of people born elsewhere who had made
the Virgin Islands their home.
A key area of difference between the Convention
and the administering Power had been over the local people’s ownership
of the Territory’s marine resources, he recalled, noting that the
administering Power regarded the islands’ natural resources as its own.
That was inconsistent with relevant General Assembly resolutions and
with the Law of the Sea, which had affirmed for decades that the
ownership, control and disposal of natural resources, including marine
resources, lay with the people of the Non-Self-Governing Territory in
question. That inconsistency must be reconciled as a matter of priority
in the United Nations.
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