China Daily Global Weekly

Xi: People enjoy fuller human rights

China advances on path that suits its national reality, with people’s interests as fundamenta­l goal

- By CAO DESHENG caodesheng@chinadaily.com.cn

President Xi Jinping highlighte­d people living a happy life as the biggest human right on May 25, reiteratin­g that the human rights issue should not be politicize­d or used as a tool or a pretext to interfere in other countries’ internal affairs.

He made the remarks in a meeting via video link from Beijing with United Nations High Commission­er for Human Rights Michelle Bachelet.

The UN human rights chief and her team arrived in Guangzhou, capital of Guangdong province, on May 23, and their six-day visit to the country will also take them to the Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region.

During the meeting, Xi briefed Bachelet on China’s human rights developmen­t and reaffirmed the commitment of the Communist Party of China and the Chinese government to upholding and protecting human rights in all areas.

He said that China has successful­ly found a path of human rights developmen­t in keeping with the trend of the times and its national reality, and that the human rights of the Chinese people are guaranteed like never before.

Since 2009, China has formulated and implemente­d four national human rights action plans to promote the free, well-rounded and common developmen­t of all individual­s.

The latest action plan was published in September and set the objectives and tasks of respecting, protecting and promoting human rights in the period of 2021 to 2025.

“We have been advancing wholeproce­ss people’s democracy, promoting legal safeguards for human rights and upholding social equity and justice. The Chinese people now enjoy fuller and more extensive and comprehens­ive democratic rights,” Xi said.

He underlined the importance of respecting different countries’ paths of human rights developmen­t, saying that any system or model blindly copied from another country — regardless of the historical, specific and practical contexts — will not only look out of place, but also bring disastrous consequenc­es. Xi noted that for developing countries, the rights to subsistenc­e and developmen­t are the primary human rights.

More efforts are needed to achieve developmen­t of higher quality, efficiency, equity, sustainabi­lity and security, in order to provide strong safeguards for the advancemen­t of human rights, he said.

He stressed the importance of putting people first in promoting human rights developmen­t, saying that it is important to take the people’s interests as the fundamenta­l purpose and goal, address the most pressing issues the people face and their immediate concerns, and strive

to deliver a better life to the people.

“How a country is doing on human rights is essentiall­y gauged by whether the interests of its people are upheld, and whether the people enjoy a growing sense of fulfillmen­t, happiness and security,” he said.

Xi underlined the need to step up global human rights governance and said that when it comes to human rights issues, there is no such thing as a flawless utopia.

“Countries do not need patronizin­g lecturers, still less should human rights issues be politicize­d and used as a tool to apply double standards, or as a pretext to interfere in the internal affairs of other countries,” he said.

It is important to abide by the purposes and principles of the UN Charter, advocate humanity’s common values, and steer global human rights governance toward greater fairness, justice, equity and inclusiven­ess, he added.

Xi expressed China’s commitment to actively engaging in human rights dialogue and cooperatio­n with all other parties on the basis of equality and mutual respect to expand common understand­ing, reduce difference­s, promote mutual learning, seek progress together and jointly advance the internatio­nal human rights cause for the greater benefit of people across the world.

Bachelet appreciate­d China for its efforts and achievemen­ts in eliminatin­g poverty, protecting human rights and realizing economic and social developmen­t, and commended China’s important role in upholding multilater­alism, confrontin­g global challenges such as climate change and promoting sustainabl­e developmen­t across the world.

The high commission­er said she is confident that this visit will give her a better understand­ing of China.

Also on May 25, in response to US

State Department spokesman Ned Price’s comment on May 24 that Bachelet’s decision to visit China was a mistake, Foreign Ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin said that it was the United States that pressured the high commission­er to visit Xinjiang and now it was again the US that opposed her visit to China.

“How come the US changes like this? The reason is very simple: They need new lies to hide the old ones,” Wang said.

“The US is worried that their lies about ‘genocide’ and ‘forced labor’ will be debunked in front of the internatio­nal community.”

However, Wang said, the lies the US spreads cannot cover the fact that Xinjiang enjoys stability and prosperity and its people live peaceful and happy lives, and instead, they will reveal the nature of the US attempt to politicize the human rights issue and make it a tool for the purpose of smearing China.

 ?? YUE YUEWEI / XINHUA ?? President Xi Jinping meets on May 25 via video link from Beijing with United Nations High Commission­er for Human Rights Michelle Bachelet.
YUE YUEWEI / XINHUA President Xi Jinping meets on May 25 via video link from Beijing with United Nations High Commission­er for Human Rights Michelle Bachelet.

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