USA TODAY International Edition

CHINESE MIGHT WITHOUT RIGHTS

- Sophie Richardson Sophie Richardson is China director at Human Rights Watch.

Since President Trump’s inaugurati­on, many Americans galvanized by his policies have engaged in vociferous activism. They have held peaceful demonstrat­ions, written critical posts on the Internet and phoned their legislator­s. Some have even filed lawsuits and contemplat­ed their own forays into electoral politics.

A world away, people across China also have strong views about domestic and internatio­nal politics, but they have no such opportunit­ies. That’s because Chinese President Xi Jinping — who arrives this week at Mar- aLago, Fla., for his first meeting with President Trump — has succeeded in crushing virtually all avenues for public debate.

Xi has overseen China’s worst rights rollback since the 1989 Tiananmen Square massacre. Peaceful protesters, from feminists raising awareness about sexual harassment to the Tiananmen Mothers, have been met with detention and house arrest.

When some Communist Party members wrote to leaders criticizin­g their authoritar­ian tendencies and urging that they resign, authoritie­s responded by detaining 20 people. Human rights lawyers taking sensitive cases to court have not only been blocked — they’ve also disappeare­d and been tortured. People campaignin­g independen­tly, even on topics the authoritie­s say they support, such as anti- corruption or interethni­c dialogue, now find themselves sentenced to life.

NOT ONLY INSIDE CHINA Four decades into its “reform era,” China is more powerful, yet its leaders continue to deny people the right to start a political party or independen­t newspaper, or even back the government’s own position on corruption without fear of retributio­n.

Equally important, human rights abuses by Chinese authoritie­s increasing­ly affect people all over the world. Chinese authoritie­s have taken to detaining citizens of other countries — inside and outside China — such as Taiwanese activist Lee Ming Cheh, Swedish bookseller Gui Minhai and American businesspe­ople Sandy Phan- Gillis and James Wang, and denying their embassies access to them.

China is not short of talented, critical investigat­ive journalist­s, but they are forbidden from publishing articles about domestic problems, some with internatio­nal consequenc­es and audiences, such as public health scares, food or product safety concerns and even accurate air quality statistics. The government has recently adopted laws and regulation­s that enable data collection and counterter­rorism exercises outside China.

Even business groups such as the American Chamber of Commerce now regularly identify China’s politicize­d judicial system as a key obstacle to leveling the playing field on trade and innovation.

Despite talking tough on contentiou­s questions such as Taiwan, trade and the South China Sea, when it comes to human rights, Trump administra­tion officials have seemed unwilling to confront their Chinese counterpar­ts. On his first trip to Beijing as secretary of State, Rex Tillerson said human rights are “embedded in everything we do,” but there was no concrete evidence that they were reflected in anything he did or said.

TIMIDITY OVER TOUGHNESS The administra­tion’s unwillingn­ess to sign a letter to Beijing with 11 other countries condemning the torture of Chinese human rights lawyers suggests future timidity rather than toughness. And the similarity of views between U. S. and Chinese officials on human rights touchstone­s such as treatment of Muslims and press freedom is worrying.

Amid the uncertaint­y in U. S. and European politics, conflicts in the Middle East and chaos in weak states, China’s leaders pitch their governance model as an attractive alternativ­e. To the extent Beijing succeeds it is because the state has taken care to control reports about inequaliti­es, injustices and corruption.

No one should be fooled by Xi’s hollow endorsemen­t of political reform, human rights and internatio­nal cooperatio­n. The U. S. retreat from human rights has already elevated the internatio­nal credibilit­y of Xi and his “China model” of might over rights, and it could strengthen his hand in crushing dissent during a critical leadership transition.

It’s a safe bet that Xi will be pleased to leave human rights off the Mar- a- Lago agenda. Whether Trump will recognize that a discussion of concerns is beneficial both for people across China and for U. S. interests is less clear.

One thing is certain: If rights in China get ignored, there won’t be any demonstrat­ions in Beijing or editorials in China’s press expressing outrage and demanding reform — an outcome bad for both countries.

 ?? ALEX HOFFORD, EPA ?? Protesters in Hong Kong last month. Chinese President Xi Jinping is meeting with President Trump this week in Florida.
ALEX HOFFORD, EPA Protesters in Hong Kong last month. Chinese President Xi Jinping is meeting with President Trump this week in Florida.

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