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US slams deteriorating human rights in China
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) July 25, 2012

Obama advisor held 'constructive' talks in China
Washington (AFP) July 25, 2012 - US President Barack Obama's national security advisor held "constructive" talks with Chinese officials in Beijing that focused on Syria, Iran and North Korea, the White House said Wednesday.

National Security Advisor Thomas Donilon "held constructive, detailed, and wide ranging discussions with senior Chinese officials" during the visit earlier this week, NSC spokesman Tommy Vietor said in a statement.

He met with President Hu Jintao and his presumed successor Vice President Xi Jinping, among others, Vietor said.

"In discussing regional and global issues, Mr. Donilon underscored the shared responsibility of both countries to address such challenges as North Korea, Iran, Syria, regional security in Asia, as well as the rebalancing of the global economy," the statement said.

Donilon also "underscored the continuing importance of the human rights dialogue."

Last week, Beijing and Moscow blocked a UN Security Council resolution on strife-ridden Syria, provoking outrage from the White House and US diplomats.

Moscow and Beijing are "on the wrong side of history," Obama spokesman Jay Carney said in denouncing the decision by what he called "a very small minority of the Security Council."

It was the third double veto by Russia and China blocking efforts by the UN to exert pressure on Damascus since the Syrian crisis began 16 months ago.


US officials and lawmakers took aim at China Wednesday, saying human rights were deteriorating in the communist-run nation as Chinese leaders move to quash even the slightest sign of dissent.

"The overall situation of human rights in China continues to deteriorate," said Michael Posner, assistant secretary of state for human rights, after two days of talks with Chinese officials in Washington.

While he praised China's rapid growth which has lifted "hundreds of millions... out of poverty," Posner also stressed "that political reforms in China have not kept pace with economic advances."

Chinese people needed to be able to voice legitimate grievances and play a "meaningful role in the political development of their own society," he said.

During the talks with the Chinese side, led by Chen Xu, a director general from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the US also raised the issue of China's crackdown on the Uighurs, as well as the self-immolations by about 40 Tibetans.

The US delegation also raised concerns about freedom of expression, including Internet freedom, labor rights and legal reforms.

"Lawyers, bloggers, NGO activists, journalists, religious leaders and others are asserting universal rights and calling for peaceful reform in China," Posner told reporters.

"We strongly believe as change occurs within a society these discussions... are ultimately about Chinese aspirations and how the Chinese themselves are navigating their own future."

US officials voiced concern about the lack of access to legal counsel for detained activists, and again called for the release of lawyers and democracy activists languishing in jail, including Nobel peace laureate Liu Xiaobo.

They also raised the cases of prominent Chinese rights lawyer Gao Zhisheng, who has been held virtually incommunicado since 2009, and wheelchair-bound Ni Yulan, who was jailed after working with her husband to protect alleged victims of government-backed land grabs.

The US delegation comprised representatives from across the administration, including from the justice department, USAID, trade representatives and national security staff.

Posner dismissed suggestions that the regular US-China human rights dialogue was of little use since conditions were not improving on the ground.

"I think over time we're responding to a very heartfelt desire by people living in China... that their cases, their issues not be forgotten. We're amplifying their voices, in effect," he told journalists.

US lawmakers also took Beijing to task for its "deplorable" human rights record at a hearing in Congress, while advocates called on President Barack Obama to personally engage with the Chinese on rights cases.

Four human rights defenders, including Chinese Uighur rights defender Rebiya Kadeer, testified to the House Foreign Affairs Committee about the deteriorating conditions in China and Tibet.

"Chinese authorities remain hyper-vigilant about tamping down anything that smacks of political or social dissent, including criticism of the government and exposure of official wrongdoing," Howard Berman, the committee's ranking Democrat, told the hearing.

Dissident Chen Guangcheng, who arrived in the United States in mid-May, had been due to testify, but later declined apparently out of fear of reprisal against relatives back in China.

The 40-year-old activist, jailed for four years for exposing abuses under China's one-child policy, escaped from house arrest in April just as Secretary of State Hillary Clinton was visiting Beijing, sparking a major diplomatic incident.

While some of the advocates said such forums as the US-China dialogue on human rights were vital to keep pressure up on Beijing, they all called for the White House to do more.

"At the highest levels it has not been a priority," Jared Genser, founder of US-based non-profit group Freedom Now, told lawmakers.

"President Obama and Secretary Clinton must personally engage on Chinese human rights cases and make full use of the bully pulpit, something they have only done to date on rare occasions," he added.

"China's backsliding on rights should have long since merited a change in tactics and a more proactive and public approach."

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Rights advocates say Obama must do more on China
Washington (AFP) July 25, 2012 - US lawmakers took Beijing to task Wednesday for its "deplorable" human rights record, while advocates called on President Barack Obama to personally engage with the Chinese on rights cases.

Four human rights defenders, including Chinese Uighur rights defender Rebiya Kadeer, testified to the House Foreign Affairs Committee about what they said are deteriorating conditions in China and Tibet.

But as an example of what committee chair Ileana Ros-Lehtinen called the "tentacles of Chinese security" extending beyond that country's borders, the most prominent witness due to testify, dissident Chen Guangcheng who was recently allowed to move to the United States, declined to appear, apparently out of fear of reprisal against relatives back in China.

"We're all aware that the Chinese record on human rights and the rule of law remains deplorable," Howard Berman, the committee's ranking Democrat, told the hearing.

"Chinese authorities remain hyper-vigilant about tamping down anything that smacks of political or social dissent, including criticism of the government and exposure of official wrongdoing."

The hearing comes after this week's annual US-China talks on human rights, and while some of the advocates said such a dialogue was vital to keep pressure on Beijing, they all called for the White House to do more.

"At the highest levels it has not been a priority," Jared Genser, founder of US-based non-profit group Freedom Now, told lawmakers.

"President Obama and Secretary (of State Hillary) Clinton must personally engage on Chinese human rights cases and make full use of the bully pulpit, something they have only done to date on rare occasions," he added.

"China's backsliding on rights should have long since merited a change in tactics and a more proactive and public approach."

He said Obama could send a strong message by meeting with detained Chinese dissident Gao Zhisheng's wife, who has been given US asylum, and organize a group of foreign leaders to call publicly for the release of Obama's fellow Nobel peace laureate Liu Xiaobo.

"We believe the US Congress and administration... need to be more proactive," Bhuchung Tsering, vice president of the International Campaign for Tibet, told lawmakers.

Conditions "from a Tibetan perspective have certainly worsened."

Representative Chris Smith, a fierce human rights defender and China critic, said he has helped enact legislation proscribing various sanctions on Beijing, including a law that bars anyone found to be complicit in forced abortions in China from entering the United States, but that the laws are not being enforced.

Kadeer said such lack of enforcement is interpreted by China "as a green light to implement its own laws like family planning."



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