The Self-Determination Group of Gibraltar at the United Nations June 1999 |
WILLIAM SERFATY, on behalf of the non-governmental organization
Self-Determination for Gibraltar, said it was hard to believe
that, at this stage in the decolonization of the world, he had to
be at the present meeting pressing for the rights of self-
determination of his people. He likened it to a trial, with the
Committee acting as jury. The supporters of his organization were
also avid supporters of decolonization and feared the territorial
claims of Spain. He was here today for justice. The process of
decolonization in Gibraltar today was stagnated because the
administering Power had realized that any results with regard to
the Territory had to come from the genuinely expressed will of
the Territory's people.
The message of his non-governmental organization was that the
grass-roots people of the Territory would accept no change other
than that which was articulated through the fully and freely
expressed democratic will of the people of Gibraltar, who saw
themselves as the rightful masters of the Territory they
inherited. The Treaty of Utrecht was signed at the height of
colonial aggression by Spain and Great Britain. It was an
abhorrent document. It included an agreement for Africans to be
shipped as slaves to the Americas and prohibited the settlement
of Jews or Moslems in certain parts of Europe. How could such a
treaty be valid? he asked. It was contrary to every precept of
the Universal Declaration of Human Rights of the United Nations.
He called on the Committee to call to order the unacceptable
behaviour of both the administering Power and the neighbouring
Power.
He said the administering Power was failing to act on behalf of
the dependent territory and was giving excessive attention to its
own national interests. In addition, the ethnic and cultural
origin of the people of Gibraltar was another issue. Eighty per
cent of the indigenous population today was made up people who
had emigrated from Genoa and Malta. Small numbers of other people
arrived from other neighbouring States, with a small quantity
from Britain and other British colonies. Very few, however, came
from Spain. The deadline for the eradication of colonialism was
less that 29 weeks away. Gibraltar must be decolonized this year.
Gibraltar's culture was not the same as Spain's and it was
important for the Committee to be aware of that, he said. That
was not possible unless the Committee visited the Territory.
Gibraltar's culture was unique and homogenous, and the United
Kingdom blocked any visits to the Territory for that reason. He
reissued an invitation to the Committee and challenged the United
Kingdom not to block that visit. With 29 weeks left to eradicate
colonialism, time had run out. If the Committee did not take a
stand now, then it was saying decolonization was not possible.
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