Tuesday, June 18, 2013

Puerto Rico’s current status “root cause” of problems, says pro-statehood leader - NBC Latino

Puerto Rico’s current status “root cause” of problems, says pro-statehood leader

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The island's two top political parties have disputed the recent plebiscite over the island's future status.
The island’s two top political parties have disputed the recent plebiscite over the island’s future status. (Photo/Getty Images )

Puerto Rico’s current status “root cause” of problems, says pro-statehood leader

Puerto Rico’s current commonwealth status is “the root cause of the economic and social problems that impair quality of life on the island,” said Puerto Rico pro-statehood leader Pedro Pierluisi to members of the United Nations Special Committee on Decolonization, arguing that Puerto Ricans have expressed a preference for statehood over its current commonwealth status.
“We categorically reject the backwards view, embraced by certain political leaders in Puerto Rico, that the status debate is somehow a distraction from efforts to address these challenges,” said Pierluisi, who is also Puerto Rico’s Resident Commissioner.
Puerto Rico’s statehood and pro-commonwealth leaders are currently entangled in a bitter debate over a recent two-question non-binding plebiscite vote  held last November 6. Fifty four percent of islanders said they were not content with the current commonwealth status in the plebiscite’s first question.  But while 800,000 out of about 1.3 million voters supported statehood in the second question, about half a million people left it blank, since there was no commonwealth option in the question.
The plebiscite results and their partisan interpretations have become the center of a political battle between Pierluisi and Governor Alejandro García Padilla.
Pierluisi told the 24-member committee, however, that it was clear that the island residents preferred statehood.  ”For the first time in Puerto Rico’s history, there are more people who want Puerto Rico to become a state than who want to continue the current status,” said Pierluisi.  ”As the November vote reveals, the statehood movement has become the predominant force in Puerto Rico, and it grows stronger by the day.”
Pierluisi said to the U.N. committee (full remarks here) that he had “described the significance of this vote to the President of the United States, my colleagues in the U.S. Congress, and the American public,” and that he also believed it was “appropriate” that he “inform the community of nations as well.”
“As Resident Commissioner, I regularly experience firsthand the injustice of our current status,” Pierluisi said. “I must fight to ensure that Puerto Rico is not excluded from job creation, health care, or border security bills that automatically include the states.  As my fellow representatives in the U.S. House vote on legislation that affects every aspect of life in Puerto Rico, I can only watch, even though I represent about five times as many U.S. citizens as any of my colleagues.”
Pierluisi, who introduced the Puerto Rican Status Resolution Act last month in Congress, said that “the people of Puerto Rico, 3.7 million strong, deserve a fully democratic and dignified status.” This remark did not include the over 4 million Puerto Ricans living on the U.S. mainland. The Resident Commissioner does not support a push by other island leaders to have Puerto Ricans living on the U.S. mainland participate in any future status votes.
“The only path forward is statehood or nationhood,” Pierluisi said. “And between those options, the people of Puerto Rico clearly prefer integration through statehood. It is now incumbent upon the United States government to respond by enacting legislation to offer Puerto Rico one or more of the status options that would provide its people with a full measure of self-government.  I have emphasized that action is necessary for both legal and moral reasons.”
Pierluisi then applauded President Obama for seeking support from Congress to “conduct first federally sponsored vote in Puerto Rico’s history, with the express goal of ‘resolving’ the territory’s future status.”
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Julio Ricardo Varela (@julito77 ) founded LatinoRebels.com in May, 2011 and proceeded to open it up to about 20 like-minded Rebeldes. His personal blog, juliorvarela.com, has been active since 2008 and is widely read in Puerto Rico and beyond.  In the past 12 months, Julito represented the Rebeldes on Face the NationNPRUnivisionForbes, and The New York Times.

UN decolonization panel: PR plebiscite rejected ‘current political subordination’ - CB

UN decolonization panel: PR plebiscite rejected ‘current political subordination’

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The United Nations Special Committee on Decolonization is again calling the United States to expedite a process that would allow Puerto Ricans to fully exercise their inalienable right to self-determination and independence.
By a draft resolution approved by consensus Monday during its annual meeting, the panel reaffirmed the inalienable right of the people of Puerto Rico to self-determination and independence, and reiterated that the Puerto Rican people constituted a Latin American and Caribbean nation with its own unequivocal national identity.
The decolonization committee has now agreed on 32 resolutions and decisions on the Puerto Rican issue, the latest 14 of them presented by Cuba and adopted by consensus.
Cuba’s representative cited the broad agreement on the need to end Puerto Rico’s colonial status. He said little progress had been made towards a solution so far, but 115 years of colonialism had not been “sufficient to crush the will or culture of the people of Puerto Rico or to wipe out their identity or feeling of nationhood.”
The panel has taken up the issue of Puerto Rico’s status every year for four decades. In a new element, the draft approved Monday took note of the November plebiscite “rejecting Puerto Rico’s current status of political subordination.”
The draft resolution was introduced by Cuba and co-sponsored by Venezuela, Bolivia, Ecuador and Nicaragua.
In the first question of the two-part referendum, 54 percent of voters said they were not content with the current commonwealth status.
The second question asked what status was preferred. Of the about 1.3 million voters who made a choice, nearly 800,000 supported statehood, some 437,000 backed sovereign free association and 72,560 chose independence. But nearly 500,000 left that question blank.
The White House has said “the results were clear, the people of Puerto Rico want the issue of status resolved, and a majority chose statehood in the second question.”
The Puerto Rican Independence Party and New Progressive Party maintain that the results of the two-step plebiscite represent a clear rejection of the continuation of the current territorial status. Those voting “no” included statehood supporters, as well as advocates of independence and free association.
Puerto Rico Gov. Alejandro García Padilla and his commonwealth Popular Democratic Party argue the ballot was rigged against the current status and that the empty ballots represent a protest against commonwealth’s exclusion from the second question. The governor says the blank votes dropped support for statehood to just 44 percent.
The $3.8 trillion fiscal 2014 budget President Barack Obama sent to Congress includes $2.5 million for voter education and the first federally sanctioned plebiscite in Puerto Rico on options that would “resolve” the fundamental question of the island’s future political status.
Resident Commissioner Pedro Pierluisi, Puerto Rico’s sole representative in Congress, has filed legislation aimed at putting Puerto Rico on the path to statehood.
Pierluisi’s Puerto Rico Status Resolution Act hinges on a proposed federally sanctioned “yes” or “no” vote on statehood in Puerto Rico. The measure proposed in the U.S. House of Representatives would ask Puerto Rican voters, “Do you want Puerto Rico to be admitted as a state of the United States?” A majority vote for statehood would trigger a 180 deadline for the president to certify the results of the plebiscite and lodge legislation in Congress to admit Puerto Rico as a state the union “on an equal footing” with other states.
The draft resolution approved by the decolonization panel would also have the UN General Assembly urge the U.S. to complete the return of all occupied land and installations on Vieques land in Ceiba to Puerto Ricans, and to release Oscar López Rivera and Norberto Gonzalez Claudio, two “political prisoners” serving sentences in federal prisons for violent cases relating to the struggle for Puerto Rican independence. The text also expressed serious concern about the actions carried out against Puerto Rican independence fighters and encouraged investigation of those actions.
Several other Latin American members of the committee echoed the references to Puerto Rico’s culture, affirming its clear Latin American and Caribbean identity. Nicaragua’s representative promised her full commitment to the Puerto Rican cause until the commonwealth’s representative’s were “seated where they are meant to be seated,” as a full member state of the United Nations.
More than 40 petitioners addressed the special committee, urging the international community to end Puerto Rico’s colonial relationship with the U.S.The majority of speakers favored full independence. Also speaking today were representatives of Venezuela, Ecuador, Bolivia, and Syria.
Juan Dalmau of the Puerto Rican Independence Party, said the most significant recent event was the November referendum. With a turnout of 78 percent, 54 percent of voters had rejected continuing the commonwealth’s current status, but despite that “full rejection of colonialism”, the U.S. government continued to defend colonialism, he said.
Pierluisi said the plebiscite had fundamentally changed the terms of the debate on Puerto Rico’s political status, pointing out that 61 percent of voters favored statehood, also the position of his political party. The referendum had eliminated any legitimacy attached to Puerto Rico’s current colonial status and people clearly preferred integration, he said.
PR not on UN’s list of colonies
The UN committee continues to take up the issue of Puerto Rico’s unresolved political status despite the fact that it doesn’t hang the “colony” tag on the island.
In 1917, Puerto Ricans were collectively made U.S. citizens via the Jones Act, and in 1952 the U.S. Congress turned the territory into a commonwealth after ratifying the island Constitution. The U.S. government then declared the territory was no longer a colony and stopped transmitting information about Puerto Rico to the United Nations Decolonization Committee. As a result, the UN General Assembly removed Puerto Rico from the UN list of non-self-governing territories.
Petitioners before the panel have pressed the international community to recognize Puerto Rico’s colonial status and place it on the list...

Pedro Pierluisi: Prepared Statement for U.N. Special Committee on Decolonization June 17, 2013: "I am honored to speak on behalf of those men and women who proudly carry the Puerto Rican flag in one hand and the American flag in the other, and who know that their love for Puerto Rico and their love for the United States complement, rather than contradict, one another... all recognize that Puerto Rico’s territory status is the root cause of the economic and social problems that impair quality of life on the island... the current status has lost its democratic legitimacy. The only path forward is statehood or nationhood. And between those options, the people of Puerto Rico clearly prefer integration through statehood... As a moral matter, the U.S. government rightfully prides itself as a champion of democracy and self-determination around the world. Therefore, it should—indeed, it must—adhere to those principles with respect to its own citizens..."

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» Pierluisi to UN: Commonwealth status is the root of PR’s economic
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Pierluisi to UN: Commonwealth status is the root of PR’s economic, social ills Resident Commissioner Pedro Pierluisi told the United Nations Special Decoloniza ... To ease shortage of organs, grow them in a lab? NEW YORK — By the time 10-y..

Pierluisi to UN: Commonwealth status is the root of PR’s economic, social ills

Resident Commissioner Pedro Pierluisi told the United Nations Special Decoloniza ...




Puerto Rico’s Congressman Delivers Statement at the United Nations…

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The current tension regarding the unresolved status of Puerto Rico was discussed today at the United Nations (see statement below). While I remain neutral on this issue of self-determination for my brethren living on the island, I am also very frustrated with the inaction of the U.S. Congress; continuing to willingly disenfranchise your fellow legal American citizens from equal voting rights.
It is very unfortunate and embarrassing for our country when a member of Congress feels he has no other choice than to raise the related injustices at the United Nations. If we are to be the world’s shining example of democracy, then how can we continue to treat our territories’ citizens as second class citizens with marginalized representation and rights as deemed by the U.S. Constitution?
If the U.S. Congress and President Obama really want to engage and empower our Hispanic voting block in this country, even if only for their political gain, then they should take immediate steps to resolve Puerto Rico’s status quagmire. To do nothing is to communicate a level of indifference that threatens to make us appear hypocritical around the globe. NEWYORICANGIRL
The Hon. Pedro R. Pierluisi
Resident Commissioner of Puerto Rico and President of the New Progressive Party
Prepared Statement
U.N. Special Committee on Decolonization
June 17, 2013
Mr. Chairman and Members of the Committee:
My name is Pedro Pierluisi.  I am Puerto Rico’s sole representative in the United States Congress, known as the Resident Commissioner.
I also serve as the President of the New Progressive Party, which supports statehood for Puerto Rico—and I am testifying in that capacity.
I asked to participate because an event has taken place that fundamentally changes the terms of the debate on Puerto Rico’s political status.
On November 6, 2012, Puerto Rico exercised its right to self-determination by holding a free and fair vote on the status question.  The results demonstrate that 54 percent of voters do not wish to maintain the current status.  To the extent that the people of Puerto Rico ever gave their consent to the current status, that consent has now been withdrawn.
The results further demonstrate that, among the three internationally recognized alternatives to the current status, 61 percent of voters support statehood.
Finally, the results demonstrate that, for the first time in Puerto Rico’s history, there are more people who want Puerto Rico to become a state than who want to continue the current status.
I have described the significance of this vote to the President of the United States, my colleagues in the U.S. Congress, and the American public—and I believe it is appropriate for me to inform the community of nations as well.
I am honored to speak on behalf of those men and women who proudly carry the Puerto Rican flag in one hand and the American flag in the other, and who know that their love for Puerto Rico and their love for the United States complement, rather than contradict, one another.  Our party believes that statehood is in the best interest of Puerto Rico, and so we seek to perfect our union with the United States, not to dilute or dissolve the political, economic and social bonds that we have forged—in peace and in war—over the past 115 years.  As the November vote reveals, the statehood movement has become the predominant force in Puerto Rico, and it grows stronger by the day.
I want to clarify an important point.  On the surface, those who want Puerto Rico to become a state and those who want Puerto Rico to become a sovereign nation appear to have little in common, given our different visions for Puerto Rico’s future, but we actually agree in fundamental respects.
We are the reality-based movements in Puerto Rico.
We recognize—rather than refute—the fact that Puerto Rico is an unincorporated territory of the United States.
We understand—rather than deny—that, although the United States approved a constitution for Puerto Rico in 1952 and was released from its reporting requirement under Article 73 of the U.N. Charter in 1953, Puerto Rico is still a “non-self-governing territory” if that term has any meaning at all.
We recognize that, under U.S. law and international law, as enshrined in U.N. General Assembly Resolution 1541, there are three status options that would provide Puerto Rico with a “full measure of self-government”:  independence, nationhood in a free association with another nation, and integration through statehood.  We do not misrepresent what Puerto Rico is, or what it might become, for the sake of political advantage.
We recognize that Puerto Rico remains an unincorporated territory of the United States despite the fact that it has been allowed by the U.S. Congress to exercise authority over its local affairs similar to that to which the U.S. states are entitled.  We likewise recognize that the U.S. Congress could unilaterally rescind the powers it has delegated to Puerto Rico if it saw fit to do so.
We recognize as self-evident that Puerto Rico does not have democracy at the national level.  The United States government makes and implements laws for Puerto Rico.  But island residents cannot vote for the U.S. President, are not represented in the U.S. Senate, and elect one member to the U.S. House of Representatives—the Resident Commissioner—who can vote in committees, but not in the full House.  Moreover, the laws enacted by Congress and enforced by the president may—and often do—treat Puerto Rico unequally.
As Resident Commissioner, I regularly experience firsthand the injustice of our current status.  I must fight to ensure that Puerto Rico is not excluded from job creation, health care, or border security bills that automatically include the states.  As my fellow representatives in the U.S. House vote on legislation that affects every aspect of life in Puerto Rico, I can only watch, even though I represent about five times as many U.S. citizens as any of my colleagues.  I must rely on the goodwill of U.S. senators who were elected to protect the interests of their constituents, not mine—and, naturally, such goodwill is not always forthcoming.  And I must request assistance from a president who, however strong his affinity for Puerto Rico might be, is not required to seek or earn our vote.  To expect that his administration would feel the same urgency to produce positive results for Puerto Rico as it does for the states is, frankly, to substitute hope for experience.
Furthermore, those who want Puerto Rico to become a state and those who want Puerto Rico to become a sovereign nation—whether in a free association with, or fully independent from, the United States—all recognize that Puerto Rico’s territory status is the root cause of the economic and social problems that impair quality of life on the island.  We categorically reject the backwards view, embraced by certain political leaders in Puerto Rico, that the status debate is somehow a distraction from efforts to address these challenges.
Finally, and above all, estadistas, soberanistas and independentistas share a deep conviction that the people of Puerto Rico, 3.7 million strong, deserve a fully democratic and dignified status.
In November, Puerto Rico took the initiative, exercised its right to self-determination, and unequivocally withdrew its consent to the current territory status.
This means that the current status has lost its democratic legitimacy.  The only path forward is statehood or nationhood.  And between those options, the people of Puerto Rico clearly prefer integration through statehood.
It is now incumbent upon the United States government to respond by enacting legislation to offer Puerto Rico one or more of the status options that would provide its people with a full measure of self-government.  I have emphasized that action is necessary for both legal and moral reasons.
As a legal matter, the U.S. Constitution vests Congress with broad authority over its territories.  For Puerto Rico to evolve and to become a state or sovereign nation, it is not enough to just seek such a change; U.S. Congress and the President must act to enable that change.
As a moral matter, the U.S. government rightfully prides itself as a champion of democracy and self-determination around the world.  Therefore, it should—indeed, it must—adhere to those principles with respect to its own citizens, or it will lose credibility at home and abroad.
I have faith that the U.S government will fulfill its legal and moral obligation to facilitate Puerto Rico’s transition to a democratic and dignified status.  But my faith is not blind. Meaningful action from Washington will be required to sustain it.
I am fully cognizant that the wheels of government often take longer to turn than one might prefer, and I therefore appreciate that a degree of patience is in order.  But I also know that justice too long delayed is justice denied.  And—after 115 years as a territory—Puerto Rico’s patience is understandably running out.
Let me be clear.  In the absence of concrete and timely action from the U.S. government, I will not hesitate to raise this case before the United Nations or any other appropriate international forum.  As the leader of a party that aspires for Puerto Rico to become a full and equal member of the American family, I have no desire to publicly criticize the United States.  But it is more important for me to secure justice for my people than it is for me to be polite.
That said, I am encouraged by the response I have seen to date.  President Obama has sought an appropriation from Congress to conduct the first federally sponsored vote in Puerto Rico’s history, with the express goal of “resolving” the territory’s future status.  It goes without saying that this issue cannot be resolved by continuing the current undemocratic status.
Last month, I introduced legislation, the Puerto Rico Status Resolution Act, which proceeds from the indisputable premise that statehood obtained more votes than any other status option in the November referendum.  The bill, which already has 72 cosponsors from both U.S. political parties, outlines the rights and responsibilities of statehood, and then asks the people of Puerto Rico to accept—or reject—those terms in an up-or-down vote.  If a majority of voters accept those terms, the bill provides for the President to submit legislation to admit Puerto Rico as a State after a reasonable transition period.  The bill also expresses Congress’s commitment to act on such legislation.
In closing, I want to express my belief that the international community, like the U.S. government, should honor the will of the people of the non-self-governing territory of Puerto Rico.  Consistent with the U.N. Charter and Resolution 1541, the international community should support a process of self-determination that will result in a fully democratic and dignified status for Puerto Rico, whether that status be statehood or nationhood.  The principle of self-determination so requires.
Thank you. 

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G8 summit - day two: Politics live blog | Politics

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George Osborne has given at least three interviews this morning. Here are the main points.
• Osborne said that more progress had been made at the G8 in the last 24 hours on reforming international rules on tax and transparency than at any time in the last 24 years.
A lot of these rules were designed in the 1920s. They were actually designed by the League of Nations, and they have not been updated as the world has changed, and the internet has arrived. And what we are using this summit to do is to provide new rules and update the existing rules so that they are fit for the 21st century. I think we've probably made more progress in the last 24 hours than people have made in at least 24 years.
• He said the deal being announced today would amount to a "real step-change".
I think what you will see today is some of the largest countries in the world accepting that we should know who owns what company. How that information is available is really, of course, partly a matter for those individual countries, because they have all got different tax systems and different parliaments and so on. What you need at a G8 is the high-level commitment that they all sign up to, the declaration, and we're working on a declaration that I think people will be impressed by ... There's a whole range of issues that are going to be brought together in a very simple declaration that will be agreed later today. This is a real step-change in the seriousness with which the international community takes these issues.
• He identified two key changes that were being made, relating to tax avoidance and evasion by companies and by individuals.
In practical terms, there are two things we can do. One is we can rewrite the international rules that allow companies to shift their profits away from the UK or any other country where they’re actually doing business - these companies are using the existing tax laws. Obviously you have to get international agreement and there’s no better place to start than when you’ve got eight of the largest economies in the world sitting around the table, and I think you will see real concrete progress on that today.
Equally, there are individuals who hide their money offshore, who don’t pay the taxes that ordinary citizens do, that people watching this programme do, and they get away with that, but we’re insisting that there is an automatic transfer of information between countries and that will mean that we can find out what’s going on in different jurisdictions.
• He said the G8 countries would agree not to pay money to hostage takers.
We’ve made further progress on other issues that are really important and don’t always hit the headlines, for example, not paying money for hostages.
Money paid to hostage takers was used to fund terrorism, he said.
• He said David Cameron was "positive" about what had been achieved on Syria at the G8 dinner last night.
I did see the prime minister last night and he was, I think, positive about what had been achieved at the dinner on Syria ... No one’s going to pretend that everyone saw eye-to-eye – everyone knows Russia’s got a different position - but what the prime minister told me was that at the end of the dinner, there was clear commitment around the table to try and push for a political solution to this humanitarian tragedy.
• Osborne said that he consulted over the decision by the RBS board to get rid of Stephen Hester as its chief executive.
Let’s be clear: it was a decision of Stephen Hester and the board, but of course, as the person who represents the taxpayer interest – we’ve got a huge stake in the Royal Bank of Scotland because the previous government put a huge amount of taxpayer’s money into the Royal Bank of Scotland – of course my consent and approval was sought; I think it would be rather bizarre [otherwise]. You’d be asking me today, ‘why didn’t you know? Was your opinion not sought?’.
• Osborne said that he had been told that this was a dress-down summit and that he should not wear a tie. (See 8.09am.)
I've taken some of the quotes from PoliticsHome.
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ONU reitera derecho inalienable de Puerto Rico a la independencia - YouTube