 |
|
EAST
TURKISTAN INFORMATION CENTER |
|
Freedom, Independence and Democracy for East Turkistan !
|
|
INDEX: |
|
EAST TURKISTAN HISTORY |
|
WUNN NEWSLETTER |
|
ARCHIVES & PICTURES |
|
HUMAN RIGHTS |
|
WEATHER |
|
UIGHUR MUSIC |
|
UIGHUR ORGANIZATION |
|
ETIC REPORT 97 - 98 - 99 |
|
ETIC REPORT |
|
DAILY WORLD NEWS |
|
NATIONAL CONGRESS |
|
REAL MEDIA FILES |
|
CONTACT US |
|
GUESTBOOK |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Uighur Press on Eastern Turkestan |
|
|
|
|
Europe and Human Rights
Monday, March 25, 2002
THE ANNUAL MEETING of the United Nations Human Rights
Commission in Geneva risks becoming a showcase of the
weakness of support for that cause among Europe's
largest democracies. As the six-week session got
underway last week, none of the commission's 53
members was prepared to raise the subject of China,
even though Beijing's record of political and
religious oppression has only grown worse in the past
year. Nor is it clear that any new resolution will be
passed about Russia's war in Chechnya, though
President Vladimir Putin has flagrantly violated the
terms of resolutions passed by the commission the past
two years. Fidel Castro may also get a bye; so far,
despite prompting from the United States, no country
has been willing to raise Cuba's case.
Some might attribute this sorry prospect to a
lessening of concern about abuses of individual rights
following the terrorist attacks of last Sept. 11. But
there is a simpler explanation: This year is the first
in the 55-year history of the commission that the
United States has been excluded as a member. Even as
countries such as Syria and Sudan -- along with
perennial targets Cuba and China -- were elected to
the commission last year, the United States was voted
off after its European allies declined to grant it an
assured place. At the time, there was a lot of
self-satisfied talk in Europe about teaching a lesson
to the arrogant and unilateralist Bush administration.
Now, however, the European governments that left
themselves alone in Geneva risk giving the world a
different lesson -- one in their own inability to
stand up against torture, massacre and extrajudicial
killings when they are practiced in places such as
Chechnya or Tibet.
Though the U.N. commission has no real authority,
Beijing has gone to great lengths to avoid the passage
of resolutions in recent years, threatening would-be
sponsors with economic and political retaliation. Both
the Bush and Clinton administrations pressed
resolutions anyway; with the United States gone this
year, the European Union released its members to take
action if they so choose. But so far none has done so
--not Britain, or Germany, or Italy or Spain -- and
not France, or Sweden or Austria, the three countries
that combined to muscle the United States off the
commission last year. If that passivity continues, the
message to China's Communist regime will be clear:
Europe has no will to resist its suppression of
political freedom, its torture and murder of the Falun
Gong and other religious believers, its campaign
against independent intellectuals or its crackdowns in
Tibet and Muslim-populated Xinjiang province.
Mr. Putin senses the weakness, too. Although he
refused to accept visits to Chechnya by U.N.
rapporteurs, as called for by last year's resolution,
he is banking on a commission decision to forgo a new
resolution this year in favor of a weaker chairman's
statement, the text of which would be agreed on with
Moscow in advance. European governments would have
taken that course last year had they not been blocked
by the United States. Now no one stands in their way;
the commission's record this year will be a reflection
of how seriously the Europeans are willing to press
human rights on governments that are capable of
fighting back. The United States has been assured of
regaining its seat on the commission next year, which
is good; now European governments have six weeks to
show what their values are.
© 2002 The Washington Post Company
|
|