China, Russia
to face more challenges as the US rejoins UNHRC; more 'wolf warriors' called for to
fight back
West woos the US
with more Xinjiang lies at UNHRC, eager to show loyalty
By
and Xia
Wenxin Published: Feb 26, 2021
https://www.globaltimes.cn/page/202102/1216632.shtml
As a new round of silent battles initiated by the US and its allies
using the excuse of human rights to attack countries, particularly China and
Russia had been waged at the 46th United Nations Human Rights Council (UNHRC)
in recent days, analysts warn that as the US re-engages with the UN body and
touts the idea of a "democratic alliance," they may adopt more
aggressive measures to pressure China and Russia by further politicizing human
rights issues.
However, they noted that as China's definition
of human rights and its practices in protecting and ensuring such rights - for
example, lifting 770 million Chinese people out of poverty over the past four
decades - have been gradually recognized by more and more countries, it may be
difficult for the US to regain leadership in the human rights domain or
for the West to use the UNHRC as a political tool.
Confronted with a stern situation ahead, Russian
experts also suggested China and Russia strengthen their cooperation in human
rights field and there should be more "wolf warriors" disclosing
Western violations of human rights.
In response to the UK, the EU, Germany, the US,
Canada and a few other countries' groundless accusations against China,
Chen Xu, head of the Chinese Mission to the UN in Geneva, said at the
high-level Segment of the 46th session of the UNHRC on Wednesday that turning a
blind eye to facts, certain countries fabricated and spread lies about
Northwest China's Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region, Southwest China's Tibet
Autonomous Region and Hong Kong in vicious vilification of China. For these
countries, human rights are nothing but a tool for political
manipulation.
The US, which withdrew from the UNHRC in 2018
under the Trump administration, reappeared in the Wednesday session as an
observer country and its Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken delivered a
speech, in which he reiterated lies regarding China's Xinjiang and claimed that
the US is placing democracy and human rights at the center of its foreign
policy.
In welcoming their "big brother" - the
US - to rejoin the UNHRC, in addition to cooperating with the US to accuse
China of "genocide" in the Xinjiang
region, some Western countries made their efforts in hyping the alleged
Xinjiang issue from the first day of the 46th session of the UNHRC since
Monday, analysts said.
Their tactics to politicize the international
body has been easily seen through. Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov
denounced these tactics at the session on Wednesday, saying that fake and
aggressive media campaigns undermine internal political stability in sovereign
states and cause violence and disorder, according to Russia's Sputnik news
agency.
The Russian foreign minister also criticized the
West for failing to unite globally in the fight against the COVID-19 pandemic,
using the pandemic instead to pressure governments it dislikes and to
politicize human rights issues.
After rejoining the UNHRC, the US would take
more aggressive measures toward countries it deems "unfriendly," such
as China and Russia as well as Cuba and Venezuela, analysts
warned.
The main reason for the US rejoining the UNHRC
is China's increasing influence in the UN body during the US' absence. Since
the COVID-19 pandemic began, the US has been worried that China, which
performed better in fighting the deadly disease, would gain leadership in
international organizations, Mao Junxiang, executive director and professor at
the Human Rights Studies Center, Central South University, told the Global
Times on Thursday.
For instance, although being absent from the
UNHRC, on March 7, seven US senators sent a letter to UN Secretary-General
António Guterres expressing opposition to the appointment of Minister Jiang
Duan from China's mission in Geneva to a seat on the consultative group of the
UN Human Rights Council.
Mao predicted that when the US resumes its UNHRC
membership, it will ramp up efforts by using alleged issues related to China's
Xinjiang, Hong Kong, and other regions to attack China. Moreover, the US may
draw upon its Western allies to form a so-called democratic coalition at the
UNHRC to push key topics such as lies regarding an alleged "genocide" occurring in
Xinjiang.
Under the guidance of the so-called human rights
diplomacy, the US would also adopt more aggressive stances and measures against
countries it deems as "evil" such as Russia, Cuba, or Venezuela. It
would also use UNHRC agendas, a universal periodic review, or other procedures
to make trouble, trying to push UNHRC reforms and place hurdles for nominees
from developing countries in attaining crucial positions in the UNHRC, Mao
said.
A silent battle
Aside from attacking China together with Western
allies on topics regarding Xinjiang, Tibet, and Hong Kong, the US would also
focus on touting its definition of human rights to regain leadership in the
field.
Rejoining the UNHRC is the US' plan to redefine
the concept of human rights and its countermeasures against China's efforts in
trying to enrich the current system, Zhu Ying, deputy director of the National
Human Rights Education and Training Base at the Southwest University of
Political Science and Law, told the Global Times on Thursday.
Part of the reason why the Trump administration
withdrew from the UNHRC in 2018 is that they believed the standards for human
rights under the system did not fit its interests or allow for it to use the
system smoothly for its own gain, Zhu said.
The US has always seen China's definition and
practices on protecting human rights as a threat. It has been against China's
promotion of human rights, for example, that human rights should be combined
with the situations of developing countries. China also believes that the
concept of human rights should be diversified as there is no one-size-fits-all
approach for human rights development and countries should not export their own
model or use human rights issues to interfere in other countries' domestic
affairs, Zhu said.
In recent years, China's practices protecting
human rights, especially regarding its efforts to ensure residents' basic
rights for living and development, have gradually been recognized by more and
more countries. And more countries agree with China's proposals that human
rights should not be used as an excuse to interfere with other countries'
domestic affairs, which worries the US and the West, analysts noted.
The West has discussed human rights over several
hundreds of years and infused certain concepts globally, highlighting that
human rights equal freedoms of speech and religion, or that democracy means
each person can vote. As for other issues, they are beyond the boundaries of
human rights, Mao said, noting that this is why the US and some Western
countries do not deem the astonishing death toll of the COVID-19 pandemic as a
fundamental "violation" of human rights.
Neglecting the basic rights for people to live
and develop but focusing more on political rights, the US and the West have
boasted about their concept of human rights for such a long time and have now
encountered questions and increasing reflection about it noted Mao.
"A German professor at my university told
me that he was surprised to see China's good performance in curbing COVID-19
while the EU and the US have done so poorly. China's human rights concepts are
reasonable," Mao noted.
A sense of crisis and pressure - both stemming
from its culture and economy - has pushed the US and the West to step up its
efforts to pressure China by using human rights as excuses. "They simply
cannot accept the fact that some countries have gained prosperity by taking a
completely different development pattern than theirs," Mao said.
Some US media outlets have expressed concerns
regarding China's growing influence on defining human rights. For example, The
Diplomat, an online news magazine, released an article on Tuesday questioning
China's alleged attempt to reconstruct the very concept of human rights
"to better suit" the Communist Party of China.
China is not seeking to implement a separate
system for human rights differing from the previous one - it is more like using
its own approach, which has been drawn from practices that enrich the current
international human rights system, Xu Yao, a research fellow at the Human
Rights Research Center of Nankai University told the Global Times on Thursday.
Also together with more developing countries,
China is fixing loopholes in the practice of human rights since the US and some
Western countries have used human rights as political rules and adopted double
or multiple standards, Xu said, noting that the US and some Western countries
are not models for human rights as they themselves have many problems,
including racism, gun control, and the gap between the rich and the poor.
The death of George Floyd, an African American
man who was murdered by a police officer in Minneapolis in May 2020, drew
international attention to the problem of racism in the US with protests
sweeping many places across the US ever since.
Challenges, opportunities coexist
Despite the fact that more loopholes in systems
and hypocrisy regarding human rights issues in the US and the West have been
exposed further, there are still challenges for China and many other countries
to face after the US rejoining the UNHRC with its influence and money, experts
said.
Compared with the US and other Western countries,
China is a latecomer in the international human rights field. Less Chinese are
taking important positions in international organizations and the interactions
of Chinese NGOs with their overseas counterparts in addition to departments in
the UNHRC remains limited, Xu said.
Xu attended the UNHRC session in February 2020 as
an expert of a Chinese NGO. He said that that Chinese experts have limited
opportunities to speak for the fields where China has done better and many of
their topics for speeches are in marginal fields.
While the US and the West use human rights as an
excuse to challenge China, experts suggested that China strengthen cooperation
with more countries, especially with Russia.
Human rights are used as a tool to enforce and
sustain the current global order in accordance with Western interests. China,
Russia and some other nations have already started to formulate a new world
order, but it will take time and much effort to formulate a different global
humanitarian agenda and render it mainstream for human society, Yuri Tavrovsky,
head of the Expert Council of the Russian-Chinese Committee for Friendship,
Peace and Development told the Global Times on Thursday.
Tavrovsky suggested that there should be more
"wolf warriors" disclosing Western violations of human rights to help
people and organizations in the West find the true situation in their countries
and the monopoly of liberalism, BLM, and other violations.
Oleg Ivanov, vice-rector of research at the
Moscow-based Diplomatic Academy told the Global Times on Thursday that there
is space for further cooperation between Russia and China as "we are in
the same boat."
"We can cooperate and unite our efforts on a
bilateral basis, taking similar positions on particular issues in the human
rights area. Russia and China can also work together in international
organizations, such as the UN, BRICS, and the Shanghai Cooperation Organization
to promote a positive agenda to avoid human rights issues being politicized to
punish other countries," the Russian expert said.
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