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Central News Agency: U.S. House of Representatives Passes Resolution Urging the Administration to Condemn China for Human Rights Abuses
(Clearwisdom.net) Central News Agency March 3 report: The House
of Representatives today passed a resolution authored by vice-chairman Chris
Smith (R-Hamilton) of the International Relations Committee, urging the
Administration to put forth a resolution before the United Nations Human Rights
Commission to condemn China for its widespread human rights abuses. The
resolution passed the House 402-2. The 60th Session of the UN Commission on Human Rights will commence in Geneva
on March 15 and end on April 23. The resolution of House of
Representatives pointed out that the Chinese government signed a pact with the
U.S. government, promising to improve human rights conditions. The U.S.
government had reasons to believe Beijing was sincere in wanting to improve
human rights, therefore the U.S. government didn't propose a resolution for the
first time to condemn China at the earlier UN meeting. However, in the past year
human rights conditions in China did not improve, they regressed. It is
therefore necessary to condemn China with a resolution and to ask China to make
solid changes. The resolution contains 81 charges accusing China of human rights violations.
The House of Representatives asked President Bush to condemn China at the Human
Rights Commission this year and sought alliance and support, in order to prevent
the Chinese government from using third-world country allies to veto the
resolution as it did in the past. The most important among the 81 charges include the Chinese government's
unwillingness to follow the internationally acknowledged right of freedom of
speech, freedom of belief and freedom of organization; it continued to suppress
the Catholic Church, which is faithful to Vatican; it continued to heighten
control over Tibetan Buddhists and activists; it persecutes human rights
activists and Falun Gong practitioners; law executioners still use torture to
extort confessions; they sell organs of prisoners on death row; mandate forced
abortion which has led to imbalance of the two sexes; and 14 years after the
1989 Tiananmen Massacre, some people who protested in 1989 are still
being incarcerated and there is no independent party to investigate the
massacre. The resolution also charged China with refusing to let the International Red
Cross visit Chinese jails, denying visits by members from the U.S.
Commission on International Religious Freedom, and preventing visits from the
delegation of U.S. religious journalists. At the Human Rights Commission meeting in Geneva last
year, the U.S. government didn't propose a resolution condemning the human
rights situation in China for the first time in more than ten years, which
attracted criticism from many human rights organizations. Afterwards, the U.S.
Congress explained that the Chinese government signed a pact agreeing to improve
human rights, and the U.S. government was willing to give Beijing a chance.
However, Human Rights Watch with headquarters in New York accused the
Bush Administration of abandoning principles in exchange for Chinese support on
anti-terrorism and issues regarding North Korea, which was the reason for not
delivering a resolution condemning the Chinese government. The U.S. also failed to propose a resolution the year before, but that was
due to third-world countries joining forces and expelling U.S. from the UN Human
Rights Commission. Reference: http://www.house.gov/chrissmith/ |