China Escapes Hostile UN Rights Resolution
(AFP | Geneva | April 10, 2002)
China's human rights record will not face scrutiny by the UN's top
human rights forum, a UN spokeswoman said on Wednesday, triggering
anger from rights organisations. "The last deadline for resolutions
to be presented was Wednesday at 1600 GMT. None of them are regarding
China," said Veronique Taveau, spokeswoman for UN High Commissioner
for Human Rights, Mary Robinson.
The failure of the Commission's 53 members to submit a resolution
on China provoked angry condemnation from campaigners, including
US-based Human Rights Watch (HRW), which denounced it as a
"lamentable lack of political will".
HRW spokesman Reed Brody singled out for criticism the European
Union and the United States, which this year has been relegated
for the first time to observer status.
"In past years, China had to at least defend its human rights
record. This year it is not even being questioned," he said.
He denounced the failure of a China resolution as a "diplomatic fiasco",
adding that the Commission's members should be
"very embarrassed to have been caught with their heads in the sand".
China has until now faced hostile resolutions every year since 1990
at the UN Human Rights Commission, currently holding its annual
six-week session in Geneva until April 26.
But Beijing has successfully blocked the resolutions from even being
introduced before the Commission in previous years, except in 1995,
by using a procedural loophole called a "no-action motion".
Three Tibetan non-governmental organisations also vigorously
criticised the "political apathy" of the 15-nation EU for failing
to act on China.
"This sends the wrong signal to the Tibetan people," said Tsering
Jampa of the International Campaign for Tibet.
In a joint press release, the three groups said the EU's refusal
to sponsor a resolution on China was based on the "flawed premise"
that action on China at the Commission would "compromise its failing
dialogue and provoke political reprisals from China".
Human Rights Watch said it had documented increasing human rights
violations in China over the past year.
The massive anti-crime campaign that Beijing launched last April has
led to thousands of arbitrary arrests and summary executions, while
new restrictions on the Internet have also been imposed, HRW said.
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