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Human Rights Stagnate In 2008 Say Reports By Gary Feuerberg

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  • Human Rights Stagnate In 2008 Say Reports By Gary Feuerberg

    HUMAN RIGHTS STAGNATE IN 2008 SAY REPORTS BY GARY FEUERBERG

    The Epoch Times
    Jan 21 2009
    NY

    WASHINGTON, D.C. In the year 2008, proponents of democracy and human
    rights faced a sophisticated opponent intent on undermining the
    influence of free nations like the U.S., according to two recently
    released reports.

    Human Rights Watch and Freedom House, independently, concluded in their
    respective 2009 world reports, that authoritarian regimes mounted an
    anti-human rights campaign to prevent reform. They also agreed that
    the Obama administration will need to make human rights the number
    one priority if the U.S. is to restore its position as a leader in
    this realm.

    "These human rights opponents defend the prerogative of governments
    to do what they want to their people," said Kenneth Roth, executive
    director of Human Rights Watch (HRW), at a press conference at the
    National Press Club on Jan. 14. Roth was referring to countries like
    Algeria, Egypt, Pakistan, China, and Russia, with the tacit support
    of even 'free' countries like South Africa and India.

    Today, a country would not dare to openly speak against human rights,
    said Roth. The principles in the Declaration of Human Rights that
    was signed 60 years ago have become too ingrained in international
    diplomacy to openly oppose them.

    "They hide behind the principles of sovereignty, non-interference,
    and Southern solidarity, but their real aim is to curb criticism of
    their own human rights abuses or those of their allies and friends,"
    said Roth.

    In effect, these nation states, which Roth labeled as "the spoilers,"
    dominated intergovernmental discussions of human rights, and
    effectively prevented the United Nations from taking action against the
    "severe repression in Uzbekistan, Iran, ... the Democratic Republic
    of the Congo," and from creating the multilateral agreements that
    could ease troubles in Burma, Darfur, Sri Lanka, and Zimbabwe.

    Freedom House Director of Research and author of the Freedom House
    report, Arch Puddington, said that what set off the reaction against
    democracy and reform was the "color revolutions" in 2003-05 in Georgia,
    Ukraine, and Kyrgyzstan, where several post-communist societies ousted
    autocratic and/or corrupt officials, mostly non-violently.

    "Powerful regimes worldwide have reacted to 'color revolutions'
    with calculated and forceful measures designed to suppress democratic
    reformers, international assistance to those reformers and ultimately
    the very idea of democracy itself," said Puddington.

    Especially after the Orange Revolution in Ukraine, "a number of
    governments took measures to repress domestic opposition, weaken
    independent media, and hinder democracy assistance efforts by NGOs
    based in the United States and elsewhere," writes Puddington.

    Freedom House's report was released on Jan. 12, when Puddington spoke
    at a teleconference.

    Freedom House and Human Rights Watch agree that the Bush administration
    dropped the ball on human rights, and allowed the authoritarian states
    to take the initiative on human rights--unfortunately, in a negative
    direction. The Obama administration will need to make human rights
    its first priority in its foreign and domestic policy in order to
    seize the initiative back, according to both HRW and Freedom House.

    HRW maintained that the Bush administration largely withdrew from
    the defense of human rights after deciding to combat terrorism
    without regard for an "enemy combatant" being subjected to torture,
    extraordinary renditions (enforced disappearances) to foreign
    countries, and indefinite detentions for detainees at Guantanamo Bay
    without charges or trial.

    Highlights of the Reports Russia continued to lose ground on Freedom
    House's measurements. Last year, Dmitry Medvedev, Vladimir Putin's
    successor as Russian president, "won an election in which opposition
    candidates were marginalized through laws and regulations that have
    effectively made Russia a one-party state...," writes Puddington.

    Increasingly repressive practices at home and in Chechnya made
    Russia more willing to undermine international intervention for human
    rights. Russia on the UN Security Council blocked critical resolutions
    on Burma and Zimbabwe, notes Roth. And Russia bullies other European
    governments to ignore their crimes in Chechnya.

    Freedom House's political rights scores for Non-Baltic former Soviet
    Union countries have deteriorated in recent years to the point
    that the area ranks below any region, including the Middle East and
    North Africa. These countries include Armenia, Azerbaijan, Georgia,
    Kyrgyzstan, and Moldova. In Armenia, for example, over 100 people were
    incarcerated after voting in the presidential election and violence
    was used to disperse opposition protesters.

    Generally speaking, the year's most significant gains for democracy
    happened in South Asia, says Freedom House. Pakistan's status
    improved from Not Free to Partly Free when military rule ended and
    free elections were held. The same upgrades in status occurred in
    two other Asian states: Bhutan and Maldives, which successfully held
    elections. Bangladesh, Nepal, Malaysia, and Thailand also registered
    modest gains.

    The successes of democracy in Asia--Taiwan, South Korea, and
    multi-ethnic-religious diverse, India and Indonesia--"[refute] the
    theory that democracy is not compatible with Asian culture," in spite
    of being home to some of the world's most brutal repressive regimes,
    namely, China, North Korea, Burma, Vietnam, and Laos.

    Surprisingly, India, the world's largest democracy, seems less
    interested in promoting democracy and human rights in other countries
    than in its own, says Roth. Of Sudan, North Korea, Cuba, and Belarus,
    India blocked or abstained or voted against resolutions or actions
    that would address their human rights conditions.

    One reason for India's lack of enthusiasm for human rights is the
    notion--a deeply ingrained view--that human rights is a Western concept
    and international protection of human rights is a continuation of
    colonialism, according to Roth.

    Iraq, although still "not free," was the only country in the Middle
    East to show improvement due to "reductions in violence, political
    terror, and government sponsored Shia militias," according to Freedom
    House. Afghanistan declined in freedom status to 'not free,' due to
    "rising insecurity" and increases in "corruption and inefficiency in
    government institutions."

    China was the big disappointment this past year when the leadership of
    the Communist Party failed to live up to its promises of more openness
    and respect for human rights as host of the Olympic Games. The regime
    cracked down on bloggers and internet journalists, placed human rights
    lawyers under house arrest, jailed democracy advocates and persecuted
    protesters, according to Freedom House. Christians and Falun Gong
    adherents were also "subject to stepped-up controls," says Puddington.

    China's nascent judicial system suffered some setbacks last year. A
    defense attorney's right to meet with criminal suspects in detention
    did not apply to cases involving "state secrets," says HRW report. The
    Ministry of Justice "threatened to not renew the licenses of a
    dozen Beijing lawyers who had publicly offered to represent Tibetan
    protesters."

    Lawyers were also prevented from representing the victims of the
    "shoddy construction of schools that collapsed in the Sichuan
    earthquake" and the "dairy companies' poisoning of baby formula,"
    says HRW.

    Both reports noted China's persecution of the Tibetans and the
    Uighurs in Xinjiang. The March 14 protests in Tibet led to scores of
    Tibetan killed and police and Communist Party authorities arresting
    or fining Tibetans "suspected of passing information abroad," says
    the HRW report. Monks in Lhasa told foreign journalists of a "massive
    'patriotic education campaign' launched by the [regime] in monasteries
    and places of worship," says HRW.

    In Xinjiang, the Chinese Communist authorities even prohibited Moslems
    from fasting during Ramadan. HRW reported that in February, China
    published regulations that prohibited 23 types of "illegal" religious
    activities, including praying in public or at wedding ceremonies.

    The Two Reports at a Glance The Human Rights Watch's 19th annual
    report, World Report 2009, is a 564-page volume that reviews and
    summarizes human rights practices in the past year to Nov. 2008,
    in more than 90 countries and territories--from Afghanistan to
    Yemen--with a special chapter on the United States.

    Freedom House's "Freedom in the World 2009," examines the state of
    freedom of just about every country in the world--193 as well as 16
    strategic territories. Using a wide variety of indicators of freedom in
    a metric, Freedom House classifies nations into three broad categories:
    free, partly free, and not free. These categories are represented by
    46 percent, 32 percent, and 22 percent of the world's 193 countries,
    respectively.

    The worst offending countries in the 'not free' category were unchanged
    from last year: North Korea, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, Libya, Sudan,
    Burma, Equatorial Guinea, and Somalia plus two territories, Tibet
    and Chechnya.

    Some other 'not free' countries were not a whole lot better, e.g.,
    China, Cuba, Eritrea, Laos, Saudi Arabia, and Zimbabwe.

    Nearly all changes in the scores on political rights and civil
    liberties that occurred in 2008 were within each of these broad
    categories. But a handful of countries changed across the broad
    categories with one 'free country becoming 'partly free' and a few
    moving between 'not free' and 'partly free' status. In Sub-Saharan
    Africa, Mauritania was a 'partly free' country that was downgraded
    to 'not free,' because "the military ousted a democratically elected
    leader and imposed restrictions on the press and freedom of assembly,"
    says Puddington.

    Most changes in scores within the three broad categories of freedom
    status moved in a less free direction, but the downturns were not huge.

    Freedom House describes itself as "an independent nongovernmental
    organization that supports the expansion of freedom in the
    world. Freedom is possible only in democratic political systems
    in which the governments are accountable to their own people; the
    rule of law prevails; and freedoms of expression, association, and
    belief, as well as respect for the rights of minorities and women,
    are guaranteed." Founded in 1941, Freedom House is widely recognized
    as providing the definitive assessment of a country's freedom status.

    Human Rights Watch is an independent organization since 1978, dedicated
    to defending and protecting human rights. By focusing international
    attention where human rights are violated, HRW seeks to build intense
    pressure for action and raise the cost of human rights abuse.
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