U.N. Special Rapporteur on Torture to Visit China "Quite Soon"
Routers: Diplomats cautious on China's invite for torture envoy
Tuesday October 30, 2001 BEIJING (Reuters) - China's willingness to invite a
United Nations torture investigator for a first ever
visit might herald a softening on human rights but his
trip is likely to come with conditions, diplomats said
on Tuesday. "As wonderful as the news sounds, we've heard it
before, which is why I'm not leaping for joy yet," a
Western diplomat said. "There's got to be some kind of a hook," she said. A European Union delegation in Beijing for regular
human rights talks said on Friday China planned to
invite the U.N. Special Rapporteur on Torture to visit
"quite soon". The rapporteur, British law professor Sir Nigel
Rodley, has been negotiating the terms of a China
visit since 1999. Rights groups say torture, despite being outlawed, is
common in Chinese jails and rooted in endemic legal
and institutional deficiencies. Rodley has insisted on unfettered access to prisons
and detention centres during a fact-finding mission,
but Beijing has said previously it would agree only to
a "friendly" visit, which appeared to limit his
access. U.N. officials in Beijing said they had heard nothing
of a forthcoming invitation, and Rodley, who
investigates allegations of torture and degrading
treatment worldwide, said he had had no contact with
Chinese officials since May. China's Foreign Ministry declined immediate comment. Diplomats said China's willingness to invite the
rapporteur did not necessarily mean it had eased the
conditions for a visit and said China may be waiting
until Rodley, who took up the U.N. post in 1993,
stepped down later this year. "They did not say that, but I suppose that is the
case, of course," a second diplomat said. "I know that
he is leaving the job."
OTHER RAPPORTEURS LINING UP In addition to the torture envoy, other U.N. special
rapporteurs have also asked to visit China and the EU
delegation said on Friday Beijing was considering
inviting the rapporteurs on religious intolerance and
education. But China has said it would consider the cases in
order, the first diplomat said. Allowing the torture
investigator to come could be a breakthrough for the
bids of the others, she said. "It would at least open the door. Right now the whole
thing is just jammed. The failure to resolve Rodley
basically means that nobody else can come in," the
diplomat said. The rapporteurs work under U.N. High Commissioner for
Human Rights Mary Robinson, who is scheduled to visit
Beijing on November 7-9 for a seminar on teaching
human rights, the United Nations said. Rodley has expressed concern about "persistent
allegations" of ill-treatment of Chinese detained in
connection with political or religious activities,
including members of the banned Falun Gong spiritual
movement. [...] Rodley has visited Mexico, Brazil, Kenya, and East
Timor in recent years and has criticised many for
abuses. http://sg.news.yahoo.com/reuters/asia-69054.html
DPA: UN Torture Talks Could Help Suspects, EU Says October 29, 2001 BEIJING, Oct 29, 2001 -- (dpa) China's apparent
willingness to allow United Nations inspectors to
assess its record on torture could promote the rights
of criminal suspects, especially the right to silence,
a senior European Union official said on Friday. China has "agreed in principle" to a visit by the UN
special rapporteur on torture, said Michael Goblet
D'Aviella, head of an EU human rights delegation to
China. "They gave us the impression that the invitations were
forthcoming," said Goblet D'Aviella, representing the
current Belgian EU presidency. In talks with the EU, China showed a "clear shift in
policy" towards more cooperation with the UN and
increasing contact with UN High Commissioner for Human
Rights Mary Robinson, who is scheduled to visit china
next month, he said. China has a "clear commitment" to curbing torture and
asked the EU to help in the "huge task" of educating
officials and police, said Spanish EU official Angelos
Pangratis. Many Chinese police still use violence to force
criminal suspects to give statements, but a planned
China-EU workshop on torture in Brussels in December
and a pilot scheme to allow suspects the right to
silence are encouraging signs that the government is
committed to change, Pangratis said. The EU human rights delegation raised range of other
issues, including China's use of the death penalty,
arbitrary detention, and its harsh treatment of
members of the Falun Gong spiritual movement and
[...].
The EU also asked for information on 47 detained
Chinese citizens and received responses on about 36
cases. The delegation told Chinese officials that the EU
hoped to see "concrete results and tangible
improvements" as a result of the twice-yearly China-EU
dialogue on human rights, which began in 1997, he
said. http://www.europeaninternet.com/support/article.php3?id=750691
Yearly Archive
Printer Version
feedback@clearwisdom.net