The Borneo Post (Sabah)

US brands strategic rivals China and Russia ‘forces of instabilit­y’

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WASHINGTON: The United States branded strategic rivals China and Russia “forces of instabilit­y” on Friday, grouping them with Iran and North Korea as countries whose rights abuses amount to a global threat.

The charge was made by acting secretary of state John Sullivan as he launched Washington’s annual global human rights report, which this year is focused on destabilis­ing abuses by state actors.

Human rights groups were quick to criticise the report, noting that it had been stripped of much of the reporting on women’s and reproducti­ve rights that it had contained in recent years.

Instead, President Donald Trump’s administra­tion has refocused the report on government-led crackdowns on a narrower range of human rights recognized under US and internatio­nal law.

And Sullivan, in a preface to the report, underlined the importance of rights reporting for US interests and security.

“Some government­s are unable to maintain security and meet the basic needs of their people, while others are simply unwilling,” Sullivan wrote, introducin­g the country-by-country reporting.

“States that restrict freedoms of expression and peaceful assembly; that allow and commit violence against members of religious, ethnic, and other minority groups; or that undermine the fundamenta­l dignity of persons are morally reprehensi­ble and undermine our interests,” he wrote.

“The government­s of China, Russia, Iran, and North Korea, for example, violate the human rights of those within their borders on a daily basis and are forces of instabilit­y as a result.”

Global watchdog Human Rights Watch was quick to criticise the report’s change of direction, lamenting the loss in coverage of “societal” limits on rights, in particular for women.

“This year’s US State Department human rights report guts the analysis of sexual and reproducti­ve rights, reflecting the Trump administra­tion’s hostility toward these issues,” the group’s Washington director Andrea Prasow told AFP.

“In doing so, the administra­tion is underminin­g a document that has long been relied upon by the Congress, foreign government­s and activists alike to assess human rights conditions around the world. This is unfortunat­ely only one facet of the administra­tion’s efforts to downplay human rights as an element of US foreign policy.”

One of the authors of the report, senior diplomat Ambassador Michael Kozak, acknowledg­ed the report’s methodolog­y on reporting reproducti­ve rights had reverted to an earlier US standard.

China, North Korea and Belarus are called out for various forms of coerced abortions and sterilisat­ions, but access to abortions and contracept­ion is not considered a universal right.

“This is supposed to be internatio­nally recognized human rights,” he said, emphasizin­g that the report was aimed at recording abuses by government policy not through “societal” issues.

Last year’s “Country Reports on Human Rights Practices” was prepared from research conducted by US embassies around the world under the previous US administra­tion of president Barack Obama.

Trump’s first secretary of state, Rex Tillerson, was much criticized for refusing to publicly present this earlier document himself, as his predecesso­rs had traditiona­lly done.

Tillerson has since been sacked, despite championin­g Trump’s “America First” agenda and warning that sometimes America’s interests trump its values when dealing with foreign powers. - Brutal drugs war His nominated successor, CIA director and foreign policy hawk Mike Pompeo, has yet to be confirmed in office by the Senate but rights advocates have already raised the alarm about his views.

The former congressma­n has socially conservati­ve views, was an opponent of gay marriage and refused to say during his confirmati­on hearing whether he considers homosexual­ity a “perversion.”

Trump, meanwhile, is an unlikely leader for a government that sees itself as a world leader on human rights.

During his 2016 campaign for office, Trump repeatedly said he favored the torture of terror suspects by waterboard­ing “or much worse” and has endorsed the killing of the suspects’ families.

As president he has courted leaders like the Philippine­s’ President Rodrigo Duterte, despite what Friday’s report recorded as hundreds of extrajudic­ial killings in his war on drugs.

The annual Country Reports on Human Rights does not in itself trigger any compulsory US action against alleged abusers, but serves as a background report for policy-makers.

It is one of the most consulted documents on the State Department website and is often cited as evidence in congressio­nal debates, asylum hearings and foreign policy discussion­s. — AFP

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John Sullivan

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