ChinAfrica

Common developmen­t

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the protection of their human rights, attained peacefully via their culture of hard work, unity and understand­ing.

Work culture

The central government has taken effective measures to sustain this culture of hard work and progress by developing the economy, protecting and promoting basic human rights, promoting ethnic unity and developmen­t, improving living standards and enabling the Chinese people to actively participat­e in global human rights governance. This path holds the key to China’s historic feats in human rights because it has brought happiness to the more than 1.4 billion people.

Going forward, the Chinese people intend to stay on this path because they have benefitted from this process. It was through this path the Chinese people ended absolute poverty that brought them a sense of self-actualisat­ion, happiness and security; it was also through this path the people of various ethnic groups of China completed the building of a moderately prosperous society in all respects across the nation.

This same path is what China is offering to the world, which provides options for developing nations in their quest for modernisat­ion. This is also China’s contributi­on to the exploratio­n by humanity for a better social system. Guided by the Chinese government’s new developmen­t philosophy, under the principle that “The state shall respect and protect human rights,” China, through its path to modernisat­ion, is not only pursuing high-quality developmen­t by fostering a new developmen­t paradigm that will help to promote common prosperity for all, but is also comprehens­ively advancing law-based governance and legal protection for human rights.

These are some of the reasons why the Chinese government has fully participat­ed in the United Nations human rights affairs and earnestly fulfilled the nation’s worldwide human rights obligation­s.

Therefore, I feel that to punish nations like China for the management of their internal affairs by imposing sanctions under the pretext of human rights is counter-productive. This act is similar to colonialis­m because if you look at the colonisati­on of Africa, you can see that it started with similar pressure. Western nations like the UK and the US have started to display similar characteri­stics under the pretence of promoting human rights by putting pressure on China and other developing countries, while turning a blind eye to their own serious human rights violations such as racial discrimina­tion and colonialis­m, and making baseless allegation­s against developing nations. But these actions are bound to fail because not only will they find no support but will end up going nowhere because most nations believe that dialogue and cooperatio­n represent the right way forward rather than the unilateral coercive measures.

As a country that emphasises human rights in economic and developmen­t terms, China considers its role among its developing country partners more as the provider of developmen­t opportunit­ies focusing on the means of developmen­t as opposed to the ends. China, which has fought its own battles to modernise, has a much greater sense of urgency for developmen­t in developing nations than several Western forces. It comes to Africa as an equal partner, without colonial intentions, human rights pressure, or interferen­ce in the internal affairs of African nations. As a result, Africans have a favourable opinion of China, because, while the Western investment­s and aid failed to lift Africans out of poverty, China’s way of doing business offers an alternativ­e opportunit­y for Africans.

Since China’s economic support is giving Africans options they never had under a Western-led world order, it has also fostered common understand­ing between China and Africa on three main areas: non-interferen­ce in internal affairs, economic interests, and human rights.

Africa and other developing nations like Pakistan, on behalf of 72 nations, and Venezuela, on behalf of 19 members of the Group of Friends in Defense of the Charter of the United Nations, issued a joint statement to support China’s position on human rights in October 2023. Their firm position to promote and protect human rights via common understand­ing and based on dialogue and cooperatio­n further shows that the internatio­nal community firmly upholds multilater­alism and solidarity and also responds jointly to global challenges.

Advancing human rights is the consistent pursuit of all Chinese. Under the leadership of the Communist Party of China coupled with the Chinese government’s realisatio­n of the Two Centenary Goals and the Chinese Dream of rejuvenati­on, further improvemen­t will be seen in the protection of human rights in China.

 ?? ?? Experts exchange ideas on protecting human rights at a forum held on the sidelines of the fourth round of the Universal Periodic Review conducted by the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva, Switzerlan­d, on 24 January
Experts exchange ideas on protecting human rights at a forum held on the sidelines of the fourth round of the Universal Periodic Review conducted by the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva, Switzerlan­d, on 24 January

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