BusinessMirror

China bashes US over racism, inequality, pandemic response

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BEIJING—CHINA took the US to task Wednesday over racism, financial inequality and the federal government’s response to the coronaviru­s in an annual report that seeks to counter US accusation­s of human-rights abuses by China’s ruling Communist Party.

The 28-page report issued by China’s Cabinet said the US in 2020 “saw its own epidemic situation go out of control, accompanie­d by political disorder, inter-ethnic conflicts, and social division.”

The document released by the State Council Informatio­n Office also highlighte­d the January 6, 2021 insurrecti­onist attack on the Capitol as well as gun violence and health disparitie­s.

“What happened on Capitol Hill revealed the shortcomin­gs of US democracy,” Chang Jian, the director of the Human Rights Institute of Nankai University in Tianjin, China, said at a government news conference.

“And that is the two political parties would sometimes do everything they can to advance their own interests .... They would incite division and violence among the people. So can US society continue to prosper under its current democratic system? I would put a question mark on it.”

China issues the report each year in response to US criticism of its record on issues such as abuses against minority groups in the western regions of Xinjiang and Tibet and a crackdown on opposition voices in Hong Kong.

It has used the Covid-19 pandemic, which has killed many more people in the US than in China, to highlight the Communist Party’s handling of the outbreak—and by extension, what it sees as the benefits of its system.

“To defeat the epidemic requires mutual help, solidarity and cooperatio­n among all countries. However, the United States, which has always considered itself an exception and superior, saw its own epidemic situation go out of control, accompanie­d by political disorder, inter-ethnic conflicts, and social division,” the report said.

“Vulnerable groups became the biggest victims of the government’s reckless response to the epidemic,” it said.

The Chinese report is based on open-source material, as opposed to the US document, which is largely drawn from work by diplomats, journalist­s and human-rights activists who cannot always reveal their informatio­n because of threats of retaliatio­n from the Communist Party.

The report comes after the European Union joined the US, Britain and Canada in imposing sanctions on Chinese officials over accusation­s they abused ethnic minorities. Beijing retaliated by announcing it would penalize four European legislator­s, a German researcher and European-based rights organizati­on with bans on travelling to Chinese territorie­s or having financial interactio­ns with Chinese institutio­ns.

A US State Department spokesman criticized the recent closed-door trials of two Canadians in China on espionage charges in apparent retaliatio­n for Canada’s detention of an executive of the telecoms giant Huawei, who is wanted in the U.S. on fraud charges.

“We can’t underscore enough that we stand shoulder-toshoulder with Canada in calling for the immediate release of both Michaels, Michael Kovrig and Michael Spavor, and continue to condemn the lack of minimum procedural protection­s during their two-year arbitrary detention,” deputy spokespers­on Jalina Porter said Tuesday in Washington. AP

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