China 'sober' on human rights
October 22, 2013A Chinese envoy told the 47-member UN council on Tuesday that China had "many difficulties" in promoting human rights. Wu Hailong said reducing poverty was the priority among China's 1.3 billion people.
Hours before the council began its four-yearly review of China's rights record, Tibetan activists slipped past guards at Geneva's Palais des Nations and unfurled a banner reading: "China fails human rights in Tibet – UN stand up for Tibet." They also displayed a mock head (pictured above) of China's new president Xi Jinping.
China faces persistent criticism, mainly from Western countries, for repression, including crackdowns on Tibetans and Muslim Uighurs in the western Xinjiang region.
Wu, a special envoy for China's foreign ministry, claimed in his speech that the Chinese government "ensures that minority ethnic groups in China enjoy extensive human rights."
'Many difficulties'
"We are soberly aware that China still faces many difficulties and challenges in promoting and protecting human rights," Wu added.
The non-binding review process - led by Poland, Sierra Leone and the United Arab Emirates – also focused on the failure of China's parliament to ratify the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR).
China signed it in 1998 but its parliament never ratified the treaty which stresses freedom of religion, assembly and speech.
The review is the first since President Xi Jinping took office in March.
'Backwards,' says critic
Prominent rights lawyer Mo Shaoping said Xi had "definitely taken the country backwards on human rights."
Chinese authorities recently detained at least 16 activists who had demanded that officials publicly disclose their wealth.
Last week, police arrested an influential blogger and a cartoonist in a crackdown on online "rumor-mongering." Rights groups say hundreds of have been arrested since August on similar charges.
'Abolish' death penalty
British ambassador Karen Pierce called on China to further reduce the number of crimes carrying the death penalty.
German Ambassador Hanns Schumacher also urged China to "publish figures on death verdicts" and spur public debate in China toward "abolition" of capital punishment.
China must continue to reform its criminal justice system, in particular to abolish the Reeducation through Labor system, Schumacher added.
China puts around 4,000 people to death every year, according to the US campaign group the Dui Hua Foundation.
Chinese state media on Tuesday said China had convicted nearly 150,000 people for corruption since 2008.
ipj/dr (Reuters, AP, AFP)