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China Faces Human Rights Scrutiny As UN Review Approaches

JayAtl

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GENEVA -- GENEVA (AP) — Faced with a U.N. review of its human rights, China acknowledged Tuesday that it still faces shortcomings but insists it has reduced poverty and has deepened judicial reforms and protections of ethnic minorities.

China put its pride and promise to better itself on display at the U.N.'s Human Rights Council, which reviews each nation's record once every four years.

Human rights groups and activists called attention to what they described as serious abuses and violations of international protections such as crackdowns on human rights defenders and tightened controls on ethnic Tibetan and Uighur populations in some provinces.

Tibetan activists managed to get past U.N. security and enter the grounds of the Palais des Nations, where the meeting is being held, and unfurl a banner denouncing China's rule in Tibet

A special envoy for China's foreign ministry, Wu Hailong, said in his speech to the three-hour session in the 47-nation Council that the nation has made many improvements but acknowledged the difficulties of a big, fast-growing country with more than 1.3 billion people and 56 ethnic groups.

"We are soberly aware that China still faces many difficulties and challenges in promoting and protecting human rights," Wu said.

The review, led by Poland, Sierra Leone and the United Emirates, called for better treatment of women, disabled people, and ethnic minorities; a reduction and eventual abolition of the death penalty; and the release of everyone detained for political reasons.

Some of the criticism focused on China's unfulfilled promise to ratify an international human rights treaty known as the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR). China signed the treaty in 1998 but its parliament has never ratified it. As part of a U.N. International Bill of Human Rights, the ICCPR requires nations to uphold basic individual rights such as freedom of religion, assembly and speech.

But China, which unlike the West focuses more on collective rights, said that since the last such review in 2009, when it accepted 42 recommendations by other countries, the country had reduced poverty, deepened reforms of the judicial systems and protections for ethnic minority groups, along with helping to spread "the right to development" among other developing countries.

"Unbalanced, uncoordinated and unsustainable development remains an acute problem," Wu told the Geneva-based Council.

He said social programs lag "in parts of the ethnic minority regions" and there was insufficient human rights "awareness" among law enforcement personnel.

On Tuesday, the Chinese government issued a white paper on Tibet, saying its "growth and progress could not have been achieved without the correct choice of a development path" in the region under Beijing's rule. The paper also accused the exiled spiritual leader Dalai Lama and his "clique" of engaging in separatist activities.

China Faces Human Rights Scrutiny As UN Review Approaches
 
BBC News - UN criticises China's rights record at Geneva meeting

UN is not a country. fact that you have to be told what to watch, read, how to behave makes and even sent off to reeducation camps, makes you true salves
...And we accept those criticisms.

"We are soberly aware that China still faces many difficulties and challenges in promoting and protecting human rights," Wu said.

What I'm saying here is, an Indian friend like you, shouldn't be the one posting about Human Rights. LMAO
 
GENEVA -- GENEVA (AP) — Faced with a U.N. review of its human rights, China acknowledged Tuesday that it still faces shortcomings but insists it has reduced poverty and has deepened judicial reforms and protections of ethnic minorities.

China put its pride and promise to better itself on display at the U.N.'s Human Rights Council, which reviews each nation's record once every four years.

Human rights groups and activists called attention to what they described as serious abuses and violations of international protections such as crackdowns on human rights defenders and tightened controls on ethnic Tibetan and Uighur populations in some provinces.

Tibetan activists managed to get past U.N. security and enter the grounds of the Palais des Nations, where the meeting is being held, and unfurl a banner denouncing China's rule in Tibet

A special envoy for China's foreign ministry, Wu Hailong, said in his speech to the three-hour session in the 47-nation Council that the nation has made many improvements but acknowledged the difficulties of a big, fast-growing country with more than 1.3 billion people and 56 ethnic groups.

"We are soberly aware that China still faces many difficulties and challenges in promoting and protecting human rights," Wu said.

The review, led by Poland, Sierra Leone and the United Emirates, called for better treatment of women, disabled people, and ethnic minorities; a reduction and eventual abolition of the death penalty; and the release of everyone detained for political reasons.

Some of the criticism focused on China's unfulfilled promise to ratify an international human rights treaty known as the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR). China signed the treaty in 1998 but its parliament has never ratified it. As part of a U.N. International Bill of Human Rights, the ICCPR requires nations to uphold basic individual rights such as freedom of religion, assembly and speech.

But China, which unlike the West focuses more on collective rights, said that since the last such review in 2009, when it accepted 42 recommendations by other countries, the country had reduced poverty, deepened reforms of the judicial systems and protections for ethnic minority groups, along with helping to spread "the right to development" among other developing countries.

"Unbalanced, uncoordinated and unsustainable development remains an acute problem," Wu told the Geneva-based Council.

He said social programs lag "in parts of the ethnic minority regions" and there was insufficient human rights "awareness" among law enforcement personnel.

On Tuesday, the Chinese government issued a white paper on Tibet, saying its "growth and progress could not have been achieved without the correct choice of a development path" in the region under Beijing's rule. The paper also accused the exiled spiritual leader Dalai Lama and his "clique" of engaging in separatist activities.

China Faces Human Rights Scrutiny As UN Review Approaches

Thanks for one more credible thread JayAtl, what we get to know is just tip of the iceberg. However, the red part was an interesting comment!! :)
 
...And we accept those criticisms.

"We are soberly aware that China still faces many difficulties and challenges in promoting and protecting human rights," Wu said.

What I'm saying here is, an Indian friend like you, shouldn't be the one posting about Human Rights. LMAO

should I be posting Chinese propaganda articles instead - is your suggestion?
 
China is well aware and has always acknowledge that there are problems. As special envoy for China's foreign ministry, Wu Hailong said: "Unbalanced, uncoordinated and unsustainable development remains an acute problem,"

Chinese is not prone to live in denial and engaged in defeatism.

A new round of this human right blaming game start anew. The west can criticize as much as they want, China would carry on with her schedule.

Has the west ever realized that in Chinese eye, their credibility wasn't as shining as they imagine it to be?
 
China is well aware and has always acknowledge that there are problems. As special envoy for China's foreign ministry, Wu Hailong said: "Unbalanced, uncoordinated and unsustainable development remains an acute problem,"

Chinese is not prone to live in denial and engaged in defeatism.

A new round of this human right blaming game start anew. The west can criticize as much as they want, China would carry on with her schedule.

Has the west ever realized that in Chinese eye, their credibility wasn't as shining as they imagine it to be?
Then you better get busy and start telling the Chinese people that...Estimated 22 MILLIONS of them...:lol:

150 Million Adults Worldwide Would Migrate to the U.S.
April 20, 2012

150 Million Adults Worldwide Would Migrate to the U.S.
Potential migrants most likely to be Chinese, Nigerian, and Indian
by Jon Clifton

WASHINGTON, D.C. -- About 13% of the world's adults -- or more than 640 million people -- say they would like to leave their country permanently. Roughly 150 million of them say they would like to move to the U.S. -- giving it the undisputed title as the world's most desired destination for potential migrants since Gallup started tracking these patterns in 2007.

Potential migrants who say they would like to move to the U.S. are most likely to come from populous countries such as China (22 million), Nigeria (15 million), India (10 million), Bangladesh (8 million), or Brazil (7 million).
 
We should expose the war crimes committed by the US in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Use of depleted uranium causing grotesque birth defects in children.
Use of white phosphorus causing grotesque birth defects in children.
Use of drones.
Operating concentration camps.
Yankee soldiers massacred women and children and burning entire villages.
Raping and killing young women and then burning their bodies to hide the evidence.
Killing over 2 million Iraqis and over 1 million Afghans.
Torturing prisoners.

That's just the war crimes and human rights abuses in ONLY 2 countries. I haven't even mentioned all the other wars.

Americans are a bunch of subhuman f*lth of the worst kind. Every Yankee soldier that dies is one less subhuman on this planet. Repulsive subhuman f*lth.
 
So after thirty years, 22 millions immigrate to US?

Why would anyone bother with such a tiny percentage of people. It is meaningless in any capacity.

Anyway, they left. What happen in China do not concern then anymore.
Are you that lacking in reading comprehension? The poll was started by Gallup back in 2007 and until now, it is estimated that 150 million people WOULD permanently move to the US. Do you understand the meaning of 'would'? I will help you...

- (expressing the conditional mood) indicating the consequence of an imagined event or situation.

I will clarify further. The word 'would' mean that if given the chance, no matter how that chance came to them, an estimated 150 million people from various countries around the world WILL uproot themselves and move to the US. But since they have no chance, they will just get by with wherever they are at. And of that 150 millions, an estimated 22 millions are from China. You do know that Chinese are usually from China, right? :lol:
 
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