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US raps China for 'serious backsliding' on rights

Rights groups: Revamp US-China talks
Washington (AFP) April 28, 2011 - Advocacy groups said Thursday that the United States should consider ending its annual human rights dialogue with China after the latest session produced no visible achievements. Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International said that the United States should instead integrate human rights into its main dialogue with China as the growing Asian power cared more about those broader talks. Michael Posner, the assistant secretary of state who handles human rights, held two days of talks in Beijing, airing concerns amid one of China's most sweeping clampdowns on dissent in years. Posner rapped China's "serious backsliding" on human rights but acknowledged that the United States made little headway in cases such as the detention of Ai Weiwei, an outspoken artist who disappeared this month.

"If the talks don't produce any meaningful results, then the US should seriously reconsider continuing this process," said T. Kumar, Amnesty International's Washington-based international advocacy director. "Otherwise, you're actually giving a fig leaf to China, a protective cover by which they can say that they're talking about human rights when at the same time things are getting worse," Kumar said. New York-based Human Rights Watch said that Posner raised important issues but that the concerns also needed to be part of higher-level dialogue. The United States needs "to get better in making the case that a failure to make progress on human rights really limits the bilateral relationship as a whole," said Sophie Richardson, the group's Asia advocacy director.

"One of our concerns about the human rights dialogues is that they tend to ghettoize human rights issues and reinforce the idea that they are and can and should be dealt with separate from other issues," she said. The world's two largest economies hold their main annual talks on May 9-10 in Washington with Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner representing the United States. The talks have two tracks -- a "strategic" side and economic talks. Clinton said she has raised human rights in past sessions, but Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International called for a formal integration of the issue into the dialogue. The United States launched the human rights dialogue after China's bloody crackdown at Tiananmen Square in 1989. But Beijing suspended talks between 2002 and 2008 out of anger over US criticism at the United Nations of its rights record.
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) April 29, 2011
A United States envoy accused China of "serious backsliding" on human rights Thursday after talks held as Beijing cracks down on government critics.

Assistant Secretary of State Michael Posner also indicated that China had rebuffed US appeals to soften the crackdown and resolve the cases of prominent artist Ai Weiwei and other detained activists and dissidents.

Posner, whose brief includes human rights, led the US delegation to the two-day US-China Human Rights Dialogue, a recurring discussion held this time in Beijing.

"In recent weeks we have seen a serious backsliding on human rights and the discussion of these negative trends dominated the human rights dialogue over the past few days," he told reporters.

"The most senior officials of the United States are deeply concerned about the deterioration of human rights in China."

Posner's comments led advocacy groups Human Rights Watch (HRW) and Amnesty International to urge the US to incorporate human rights into its main dialogue with China, saying Beijing cared more about those broader talks.

"One of our concerns about the human rights dialogues is that they tend to ghettoize human rights issues and reinforce the idea that they are and can and should be dealt with separate from other issues," said Sophie Richardson, New York-based HRW's Asia advocacy director.

T. Kumar, Amnesty International's Washington-based international advocacy director, said: "If the talks don't produce any meaningful results, then the US should seriously reconsider continuing" with them.

"Otherwise, you're actually giving a fig leaf to China, a protective cover by which they can say that they're talking about human rights when at the same time things are getting worse," Kumar added.

The US State Department had made clear before the latest dialogue that it would zero in on China's clampdown and a "negative trend of forced disappearances, extralegal detentions, and arrests and convictions".

Chinese authorities have launched their toughest campaign against government critics in years after anonymous online appeals emerged in February calling for weekly protests to emulate those that have rocked the Arab world.

Scores of Chinese activists and rights lawyers have been rounded up since the emergence of the "Jasmine" campaign, which has gone largely unheeded.

Human rights groups had urged the Americans to step up pressure in the dialogue, which has been criticised as a toothless talking shop that had achieved nothing so far in pressuring China to improve its human rights record.

It appeared the latest round of talks had failed to achieve any breakthroughs as China on Thursday repeated its insistence that its handling of dissent was its own business.

"We are against any country interfering in China's internal affairs under the pretext of human rights issues," foreign ministry spokesman Hong Lei told a regular news briefing, when asked about the dialogue's outcome.

Posner said the US side raised sensitive rights issues such as restrictions on religious groups, China's handling of restive minorities such as Tibetans and Muslim Uighurs, and the detentions of scores of rights lawyers and activists.

These included the case of Ai Weiwei, a prominent artist and staunch critic of the Communist Party whose disappearance into police custody in early April sparked criticism from around the world.

While refusing to characterise China's response in detail, Posner said China's delegation, led by foreign ministry official Chen Xu, acknowledged that government critics had vanished.

"There was a recognition that in the past month people had disappeared," he said.

Yet he made clear the US had otherwise made no headway in particular cases such as Ai's. "We did not get an answer that satisfied us," he said of Ai.

Posner indicated China similarly rebuffed appeals in the case of jailed dissident writer Liu Xiaobo -- who won the Nobel Peace Prize in October -- and his wife Liu Xia.

Liu was jailed in 2009 for 11 years for subversion, and Liu Xia has been incommunicado under house arrest since shortly after the Nobel announcement.

Posner said a request to allow access to Liu Xia was denied.



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