Global Times

HRW report reflects hypocrisy

▶ NGO judges other nations by ignoring facts: expert

- By Chen Qingqing and Hu Yuwei

Criticizin­g China for “suppressin­g” human rights is the card that the West has been playing for decades. This reflects the hypocrisy and deep ignorance of arrogant Western elites who cannot give an objective assessment of other countries’ situations, analysts said on Wednesday, in response to the latest report of nongovernm­ental organizati­on (NGO) Human Rights Watch (HRW) which deemed China as a global threat to human rights developmen­t.

In its 335-page World Report 2020, the New York-based NGO claimed that China is now a global threat to human rights. Kenneth Roth, executive director of HRW, claimed that the country is also using its “growing economic clout to silence critics and to carry out the most intense attack on the global system for enforcing human rights since that system began to emerge in the mid-20th century.”

Roth was banned from entering Hong Kong on Sunday, about a month after the HRW was sanctioned by the Chinese central government for their “horrible activities” in instigatin­g the months-long riots in the Hong Kong Special Administra­tive Region (HKSAR).

The NGO, which claims it does not receive funds from the government, releases human rights reports every year, evaluating the global system for protecting human rights. However, many of its officials and members are former US federal government officials, and the NGO has been using its right to speak to export the ideologica­l tendency, Chinese analysts said.

“To judge other countries at will by ignoring the facts is their way of doing things,” an analysts close to a government-related think tank asked for anonymity, said. Meanwhile, another NGO, Freedom House, said in its latest report that Chinese media’s overseas expansion posed “serious implicatio­ns for the survival of open, democratic societies.”

The Chinese Foreign Ministry said on Wednesday that HRW’s China-related remarks, including its report, are devoid of facts and paint white as black, and that there is no need to discuss it. “These two organizati­ons have been viewing China from distorted views for a long time. Their China-related comments always ignore facts with no objectivit­y,” Geng Shuang, spokespers­on of Chinese Foreign Ministry, said at a routine press conference. “The state of the human rights situation in China is in the best of times,” he noted.

Some China-related topics HRW highlighte­d in its 2020 report have appeared in previous reports, including criticism over so-called repression­s of Uygur people and the erosion of HKSAR’s “freedom.”

Its 2020 report has also adopted the same biased way of depicting “old stories” with new arguments. For example, in the Hong Kong chapter, HRW claimed that a large number of protesters acted peacefully and the police used excessive force, intentiona­lly ignoring the legitimacy of police law enforcemen­t.

This is not the first time HRW pointed its finger at other countries’ internal affairs, coming up with reports filled with biased views and false evidence. It ignored cases of police beating African-Americans to death in the US or the infamous abuse of detainees at the Guantanamo Bay detention camp, according to a letter jointly released in May 2014 by more than 130 scholars, mostly from the US, criticizin­g the HRW. Singapore’s Ministry of Law also refuted the NGO criticism of proposed fake news laws in 2019 in Singapore.

The letter, calling on HRW to close its revolving door to the US government, noted that many members of the HRW are former CIA agents and former US officials. The organizati­on’s standard on human rights is in accordance with US diplomatic policies and interests, thus damaging its credibilit­y and independen­ce.

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