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Israel, China
Cited for Right Abuses
By SONYA ROSS
The Associated Press
Tuesday, April 1, 2003; 2:31 AM
Some of the countries supporting U.S.-led efforts to oust Saddam Hussein
score a below-par human rights performance in the State Department's annual
human rights report, while others get a passing grade.
The report, published Monday, also described the protracted conflict
between Israel and the Palestinians as rife with "numerous, serious human
rights abuses" during 2002, while China maintained its less-than-stellar
rights record.
Among supporters of the war against Iraq, the already poor record of
the Eritrean government worsened, the report said, and Uzbekistan earned
a "very poor" rating even though there were some notable improvements.
Qatar and Kuwait, also supporters of the war, were said to be generally
respectful of their citizens - as were Germany and France, two countries
most identified with opposing the war.
The U.S.-led coalition in Iraq is liberating that country from a "ruthless
tyranny that has shown utter contempt for human life," Secretary of State
Colin Powell told reporters Monday. He pledged to help ordinary Iraqis
create a "representative democracy that respects the rights of all of
its citizens."
On Israel, the report said the country's overall human rights record
in the occupied territories remained poor, and worsened in several areas
as it continued to commit "numerous, serious human rights abuses."
"Security forces killed at least 990 Palestinians and two foreign nationals
and injured 4,382 Palestinians and other persons during the year, including
innocent bystanders," the report said.
It said Israeli security forces targeted and killed at least 37 Palestinian
terror suspects.
"Israeli forces undertook some of these targeted killings in crowded
areas when civilian casualties were likely, killing 25 bystanders, including
13 children," the report said.
It noted that the Israeli government said that it made every effort to
reduce civilian casualties during these operations.
The report said many members of Palestinian security services and the
Fatah faction of the Palestine Liberation Organization participated with
civilians and terrorist groups in violent attacks against Israeli settlers,
other civilians and soldiers.
Although there was no conclusive evidence that the most senior PLO or
Palestinian Authority leaders gave prior approval for these acts, the
report said some leaders endorsed such acts in principle in speeches and
interviews.
On China, the report said abuses included "instances of extrajudicial
killings, torture and mistreatment of prisoners, forced confessions, arbitrary
arrest and detention, lengthy incommunicado detention and denial of due
process."
At the same time, the report credited the government with some positive
steps, including the release of a number of prominent dissidents and the
granting of permission for senior representatives of the Dalai Lama to
visit the country.
The administration usually attempts to censure China on human rights
at the annual meeting of the U.N. Human Rights Commission in Geneva. The
meeting is now in its third week, and Powell declined on Monday to say
whether Washington will introduce a China resolution at the commission
meeting.
The report noted religious harassment in Russia, but praised President
Vladimir Putin's government for installing a new criminal code that, for
the first time, established that people could be arrested or detained
only through judicial decision.
"The changes appeared to be having an effect on police, prosecutorial
behavior and the judicial system, although there were reports of noncompliance
in some regions," the report said.
The report, covering almost 200 countries, said respect for human rights
was generally good in Latin America but it listed six countries where
rights conditions were listed as "poor" -- Colombia, Cuba, Dominican Republic,
Ecuador, El Salvador and Venezuela.
In Pakistan, a key ally in the war on terrorism, the report said the
government's rights record remained poor. "In general police continued
to commit serious abuses with impunity," it said.
© 2003 The Associated Press
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