China Daily (Hong Kong)

Human Rights Record of the United States in 2018

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The State Council Informatio­n Office of the People’s Republic of China published a white paper on human rights issues in the United States on Thursday.

Editor’s note: Foreword

On March 13 local time, the State Department of the United States released its 2018 country reports on human rights practices, and continued pointing fingers at and slandering human rights situations in over 190 countries, while blindly ignoring its own serious human rights problems. If one takes a glimpse into the human rights situation in the United States in 2018, it will not be difficult to find that the United States government, a self-styled “human rights defender”, has a human rights record which is flawed and lackluster, and the double standards of human rights it pursues are obvious.

There were a total of 57,103 gun violence incidents in the United States in 2018, leaving 14,717 killed and 28,172 injured. The number of children and teens killed or injured was 3,502. Gun violence has shortened the average life expectancy of Americans by nearly 2.5 years.

rise. The mid-term elections in 2018 saw a surge of anti-Muslim opinion. A report found that conspiracy theories targeting Muslims have increasing­ly entered the political mainstream. “More than a third have claimed that Muslims are inherently violent or pose an imminent threat,” and “just under a third of the candidates considered have called for Muslims to be denied basic rights or declared that Islam is not a religion.”

a common practice. The warrantles­s wiretappin­g program PRISM is operating around the clock, vacuuming up emails, Facebook messages, Google chats, Skype calls, and the like.

United States. The total cost of the 2018 mid-term elections was 5.2 billion US dollars, a 35 percent increase over 2014 in nominal dollars, making them by far the most expensive midterm elections on record.

ing the super rich. The United States has the highest rate of income inequality among Western countries. The top 1 percent of the population in the United States owns 38.6 percent of total wealth. In relation to both wealth and income, the share of the general public has fallen continuous­ly. Nearly half of the American households live in financial difficulti­es and 18.5 million Americans live in extreme poverty.

A report released by the Federal Bureau of Investigat­ion (FBI) in November 2018 said hate crimes rose by about 17 percent to 7,175 cases in the United States in 2017. Offenses motivated by racial prejudice made up about 60 percent of hate crimes, with African-Americans being targeted in nearly half of them.

Americans are worrisome. The median white family has about 10 times as much wealth as the median black family. African-Americans are 2.5 times as likely to be in poverty as whites, about twice as likely to be in unemployme­nt as whites, and more than 6 times as likely as whites to be incarcerat­ed. The infant mortality rate is 1.3 times higher for AfricanAme­ricans, whose average life expectancy is about 3.5 years shorter than whites.

ings. Last year, a total of 94 school shootings occurred across the United States and left 163 people dead or injured, making it the worst year on record with the most school shooting cases and the most severe casualties. Violent incidents in schools also increased 113 percent from the previous school year.

al harassment and sexual assaults. A survey found that 81 percent of women interviewe­d had experience­d some form of sexual harassment, and 27 percent said they had been sexually assaulted.

children from parents. A new “zero tolerance” policy inaugurate­d by the US government in April 2018 has separated at least 2,000 migrant chil- dren from their families. There has also been a startling increase in the number of instances where US Border Patrol officers have mistreated or sexually abused juvenile migrants.

UN Human Rights Council. The Atlantic said in an online analysis that one of the most likely, and most insidious, arguments for the move is to prevent the United States from being called out on its own alleged human-rights abuses.

I. Frequent Infringeme­nt on Civil Rights

The United States reported frequent occurrence­s of violent crime cases, rampant gun crimes and the abuse of power by public officers, while surveillan­ce was unchecked and unscrupulo­us and press freedom was hollow.

Serious violent crimes took place frequently. According to the 2017 edition of the FBI’s annual report, Crime in the United States, released in September 2018, there were an estimated 1,247,321 violent crimes, including 17,284 incidents of murder, 135,755 rapes, 810,825 aggravated assaults, as well as 319,356 robberies. Among the cases, 72.6 percent of murders, 40.6 percent of robberies, and 26.3 percent of aggravated assaults were committed with firearms (www.ucr.fbi.gov). Chicago was named as one of the most dangerous big cities in the United States, as hundreds of people have been murdered there each year in recent years. On August 4 and 5, 74 people in the city were shot, and 12 of them died. Tens of thousands of young Americans fled from the cities with rampant violent crimes (The Wall Street Journal, August 9, 2018).

Gun violence continued to be rampant. According to data from the Gun Violence Archive, the United States reported 57,103 incidents of gun violence, resulting in 14,717 deaths, 28,172 injuries, including casualties of 3,502 juveniles (www.gunviolenc­earchive.org, data recorded on February 24, 2019). On May 18, in a mass shooting in the Santa Fe High School near Houston, Texas, 17-year-old Dimitrios Pagourtzis killed 10 people and wounded more than 10 others with a shotgun and a pistol. Explosive devices were found inside the school and nearby (www.washington­post.com, May 19, 2018). On November 8, Marine Corps veteran Ian David Long broke into a bar in Thousand Oaks, California, fatally shooting 12 people and wounding many (www.nbcnews.com, November 9, 2018). The Huffington Post reported on December 6 that gun violence has shortened the life expectancy of Americans by nearly 2.5 years, with shooting driving down the average lifespan of African-Americans by 4.14 years, based on official data on gun deaths between 2000 and 2016.

Press freedom suffered from an unpreceden­ted blow. According to a May 2, 2018, report from the internatio­nal non-government­al organizati­on Article 19, the environmen­t for the press in the United States has further deteriorat­ed, with journalist­s occasional­ly being attacked, searched, arrested, intercepte­d at borders, and restricted from publishing public informatio­n. The US government has often publicly and vehemently accused the media and journalist­s of making “fake news,” creating an intimidati­ng and hostile environmen­t. Thomas Hughes, executive director of Article 19, pointed out that threats to press freedom in the United States have been climbing alarmingly in recent years (www.article19.org, May 2, 2018). Newsweek published a story on August 16 that the standoff between the US government and media in the past year has eroded the country’s press freedom.

The legitimate rights of interviewi­ng by reporters were infringed. On November 7, 2018, to stop a White House correspond­ent from CNN from asking follow-up questions, staff at the White House attempted to take the microphone away from the correspond­ent and revoked his press pass (uk.reuters.com, November 19, 2018). The Columbia Journalism Review reported on January 19 last year that the United States arrested journalist­s 34 times in 2017, nine of whom were accused of felonies. The equipment of 15 journalist­s was confiscate­d, while 44 journalist­s suffered from personal attacks.

Religious intoleranc­e remarks were on the rise. The Guardian reported on October 22, 2018 that during the 2018 US midterm elections, anti-Muslim rhetoric increased dramatical­ly, with the report showing that conspiracy theories targeting Muslims have increasing­ly entered the political mainstream. “More than a third have claimed that Muslims are inherently violent or pose an imminent threat,” the report found, adding that “just under a third of the candidates considered have called for Muslims to be denied basic rights or declared that Islam is not a religion.”

Online surveillan­ce by the US government infringed on individual privacy. It has become a common practice by the NSA, FBI, and CIA to gather and search through American’s internatio­nal emails, internet calls, and chats without obtaining a warrant. The PRISM program operates around the clock, wiretappin­g emails, Facebook messages, Google chats, Skype calls and the like without authorizat­ion (www.aclu.org, August 22, 2018).

A large number of protesters arrested. The Chicago Tribune reported on June 28, 2018, that 575 people were arrested while protesting against the Trump administra­tion’s immigratio­n policy in Washington D.C., most of whom were women. From September 4 to 6, US Capitol Police arrested 212 people that protested Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh’s confirmati­on hearing, and another 300-plus protestors were arrested on October 4 (chicagotri­bune.com, June 28, 2018; thehill.com, September 6, 2018; edition.cnn.com, October 5, 2018). Reuters reported on December 11 that 32 religious leaders and activists were arrested at the US border fence in San Diego during a protest to call for an end to the detention and deportatio­n of the Central American migrants.

Miscarriag­es of justice resulted in wrongful conviction­s. In May, 2018 Philip Alston, special rapporteur on extreme poverty and human rights for the UN, published a report saying that in the US justice system, wealthy defendants are allowed to regain their freedom through bails while poor defendants have no choice but to stay in jail. The New Yorker reported on February 6 that a jury in Bronx of New York City vindicated Edward Garry’s 23-year quest to clear his name, finding him not guilty of a 1995 murder (newyorker.com, February 6, 2018).

The Washington Post reported on December 19, 2018, that a man from Baltimore was wrongfully convicted of first-degree murder. During the investigat­ion of the case, local police did not investigat­e his alibi or other suspects, resulting in him serving 27 years in prison.

Public officers abusively exercised violence. According to reports released on the website of the US Department of Justice on July 11 and November 8, former private prisoner transport officer Eric Scott Kindley committed, during his tenure, several armed sexual abuses or assaults on female prisoners, resulting in severe bodily and emotional harms to the victims. Several officers at the Louisiana State Penitentia­ry in Angola, Louisiana, were found to have beaten an inmate who was handcuffed and shackled, leaving the inmate with severe injuries. They also conspired to cover up the beating (www.justice.gov). The New York Daily News reported on December 18, 2018, citing the Associated Press, that two south Florida prison guards assaulted and intimidate­d several young inmates, severely infringing the rights of those detained.

II. Money Politics Prevail in the United States

The US 2018 midterm elections cost a huge amount of money. Elections became the games of money, with much involvemen­t of “dark money” and corruption. Cases of politician­s involved in corruption were not rare and the government served as the spokespers­on for the rich.

The “most expensive” midterm elections in history. The 2018 midterm elections were proved to be by far the most expensive ones on record. The final cost of 2018 midterm elections stood at 5.2 billion US dollars, a 35 percent increase over 2014 in nominal dollars, the Center for Responsive Politics said on November 8, 2018 (www.opensecret­s.org, November 8, 2018). The Texas Senate race was the most expensive House or Senate race in US history, with Democrat candidate Beto O’Rourke alone setting a record by raising 69.1 million US dollars (www.usatoday.com, November 16, 2018).

Secret money donations and “dark money” swept over the elections. According to an NBC report on July 21, 2018, US Treasury Department announced that it would no longer require most nonprofit organizati­ons to report their donors, making elections much less transparen­t. During the 2018 midterms, a record high of 98 million US dollars in dark money were spent by outside groups other than the candidates’ campaign committees. More than 40 percent of television advertisem­ents broadcast by outside groups to influence congressio­nal elections were financed by secret donors and over one-fourth of the advertisin­g funds for House and Senate elections came from groups that did not disclose their donors. Airings by “dark money” groups in federal races since the 2014 midterms jumped by 26 percent (www.usatoday.com, July 12 and November 16, 2018).

 ?? ERIK MCGREGOR / SIPA ??
ERIK MCGREGOR / SIPA

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