Beijing Review

A New Horizon

Discussing the Chinese perspectiv­e on human rights

- By Li Wenhan

What is the contempora­ry significan­ce of the concept of human rights? How to grasp its implicatio­ns? Does this concept still wield influence in safeguardi­ng individual­s’ fundamenta­l needs?

Chinese and foreign scholars recently exchanged their ideas on and observatio­ns of human rights in China at a January 20 seminar hosted by the China Internatio­nal Communicat­ions Group Center for the Americas (CICG Americas) ahead of the fourth cycle of the universal periodic review of China which was launched by the UN Human Rights Council on January 23.

Many of them agreed that human rights are couched in abstract terms in recent popular Western discourse and that China should offer a comprehens­ive and culturally grounded perspectiv­e on human rights, taking into account each country’s unique historical, cultural and developmen­tal context.

Experts and geopolitic­al analysts from China, the U.S., Southeast Asian countries and Brazil focused on human rights developmen­t in China and the United States with special attention paid to China’s Xinjiang Uygur and Xizang autonomous regions as well as gender equality issues.

Human rights guaranteed

John Pang, a senior research fellow at Perak Academy in Malaysia, who has also been studying governance from the perspectiv­e of philosophy for decades, believed human rights should serve as the guardians of human essence and dignity. However, he observed a deviation from this purpose in some nations, where the tool of human rights is wielded not for the protection of people but to establish dominance over sovereign states.

Pang advocated transcendi­ng the Western narrative and embarking on a reframing of the human rights concept. In an analogy, he likened this transforma­tive endeavor to Isaac Newton and Albert Einstein’s revolution­ary physics theories—both constituti­ng profound paradigm shifts.

China considers the right to subsistenc­e and developmen­t primary and fundamenta­l human rights. It strives to improve the rights of its entire population in a coordinate­d way and works for their all-round developmen­t, he added.

“The best contributi­on you can contribute in the world to human rights is developmen­t and ending poverty,” Benjamin Norton, an independen­t American journalist and geopolitic­al analyst, echoed, emphasizin­g China’s lifting 800 million people out of extreme poverty over the past 40 years as well as the country’s extensive infrastruc­ture developmen­t, an essential contributi­on to poverty alleviaito­n.

“Additional­ly, China plays a role in fostering global economic opportunit­ies,” he said. It launched the Belt and Road Initiative in 2013, an initiative to boost connectivi­ty along and beyond the ancient Silk Road routes, which had been joined by 152 countries and 32 internatio­nal organizati­ons as of June 2023. According to the National Developmen­t and Reform Commission, China’s national economic planner, last September, since 2013, some 77,000 China-Europe freight train trips had been made, providing services for 217 cities in 25 European countries.

China’s poverty alleviatio­n campaign triggered an interest in this country for Filipe Porto, an internatio­nal relations researcher at Brazil’s Federal University of ABC and an editorial consultant at the Portuguese digital monthly magazine China Hoje under CICG Americas.

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Porto shared some of his personal experience­s at the seminar. He admitted that for a long time, his impression about China mostly stemmed from the articles published by Western media he’d read. But when he first came to China in 2008, the opening ceremony of the Beijing Summer Olympics that year served as a demonstrat­ion of China’s capabiliti­es for him. In late 2020, the news that China had eradicated extreme poverty in the country reaffirmed that belief.

The U.S. and Western media frequently address human rights issues in Xinjiang and Xizang mostly with a negative undertone. Xiao Junyong, Executive Director of the Center for Science, Technology and Human Rights at the Beijing Institute of Technology, emphasized that promoting high-quality developmen­t is crucial for ensuring the advancemen­t of human rights. He said Xinjiang’s agricultur­e, new energy and tourism sectors have developed rapidly, and the region has become an important supply place for high-quality agricultur­al products in China.

Xie Maosong, a senior research fellow with the National Institute of Strategic Studies at Tsinghua University, provided a historical perspectiv­e on the rightful status of Xizang as a part of China’s territory. He countered the misreprese­ntation and negative narrative of boarding schools in Xizang by the U.S., highlighti­ng the tendency of Western countries, notably the U.S., to politicize and weaponize the Xizang- and Xinjiang-related issues.

Women’s rights

Shen Guoqin, an associate professor at the Law School at the People’s Public Security University of China, discussed the developmen­t of human rights in China from the perspectiv­e of women’s rights protection, and especially noted the improvemen­ts and achievemen­ts in the related legal framework.

Shen noted that the Constituti­on, the core of China’s legal system, emphasizes women’s equality with men in all aspects, including economic, social and cultural. A report released by the Standing Committee of the National People’s Congress (NPC),

China’s top legislativ­e body, said the proportion of women having endured physical or psychologi­cal violence in marital relationsh­ips stood at 8.6 percent in 2021, a decrease of 5.2 percentage points compared to 2010.

The NPC Standing Committee in 2015 reviewed and passed the Anti-Domestic Violence Law, which took effect in March 2016.

In recent years, seven areas, including health education, economic decisionma­king and social security, have been included in the statistica­l monitoring of the developmen­t of women’s rights and interests, Shen stressed.

At the seminar, Li Fangfang, a Beijing Review journalist and a Xinjiang native, elaborated on the region’s developmen­t of human rights by sharing the improvemen­ts in the developmen­t of women’s rights as well as the continuous evolution of rural revitaliza­tion there.

In recent years, Western media have taken a special interest in Xinjiang, but the Xinjiang they portray is vastly different from the one experience­d by local people, Li added.

Shifting the focus

Pang said human rights are abstract in the Western discourse and that the West has “shaped the concept of human rights as a system of power and rule, separated from everything important to human beings—such as food, clothing and shelter.”

Norton traced the origins of the discourse on human rights. He said whereas the concept of human rights is centuries old, the discourse on human rights is relatively modern, having been popularize­d in the neoliberal era of the 1970s.

For the U.S., for instance, “the government’s protection of human rights is only about individual freedom, while erasing social services, healthcare and education, housing and the right to work from it,” he said, elaboratin­g, “The role of human rights is only to justify neoliberal economic policy and American foreign policy.”

He compared the public safety situation of China and the U.S., and pointed out that whereas the latter sees gun proliferat­ion, the former is one of the safest countries on Earth.

“Women can walk around at night and they’re not going to be afraid of being attacked, people are not afraid of getting shot, whereas the United States has more guns than human beings. The country has as many as 300-400 shootings every year,” he said. “Isn’t this a violation of human rights?” Norton asked.

“The comparison with the United States is stark: While China focuses on poverty alleviatio­n and infrastruc­ture, the United States, under the guise of safeguardi­ng human rights, bombed Serbia and violated internatio­nal law by invading Iraq. The U.S. mliitary actions in Iraq resulted in the loss of hundreds of thousands of Iraqi lives, showcasing a striking contrast in their approaches to human rights,” Norton noted.

The number of Iraqi civilians killed between 2003 and 2022 stands at 209,982, according to figures from Iraq Body Count, the world’s largest public database of violent civilian deaths in Iraq since the 2003 invasion. And the invasion of Iraq has uprooted at least 9.2 million, a report by Brown University’s Costs of War Project said in 2020.

Pang said China’s civilizati­on, which includes its ideologica­l system, has a history of 5,000 years, over the course of which it has created its own view of the world and of what an individual is entitled to.

During the human rights seminar, all speakers emphasized the importance of carefully considerin­g each country’s unique national conditions and historical background­s when discussing human rights, recognizin­g that approaches to human rights can vary across different nations.

 ?? ?? Children on their way back from school in Taxkorgan Tajik Autonomous County, northwest China’s Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region, on September 4, 2023
Children on their way back from school in Taxkorgan Tajik Autonomous County, northwest China’s Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region, on September 4, 2023

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