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![]() ![]() China hits out at U.S. over rights censure BEIJING, March 30 (Reuters) - Beijing demanded on Tuesday that Washington correct its "erroneous" decision to sponsor a U.N. resolution critical of China's human rights record. "We are resolutely opposed to the U.S. government's decision to raise an anti-China resolution at the U.N. Human Rights Commission meeting," Foreign Ministry spokesman Sun Yuxi told reporters. The six-week annual meeting opened in Geneva last week. "We demand the United States immediately rectify its erroneous decision and abandon its practice of interfering in China's internal affairs," he added. U.S. State Department spokesman James Rubin said last week the decision to seek censure of China in Geneva was in response to the crackdown on Chinese pro-democracy activists that started late last year. Three founding members of the banned China Democracy Party were sentenced late last year to jail terms ranging from 11 to 13 years for subversion. The People's Daily, organ of the Communist Party, lambasted the U.S. move as biased, short-sighted and doomed to failure. "It is like drinking poison to quench one's thirst," it said, quoting a Chinese saying that means seeking temporary relief regardless of consequence. "It can be foreseen that the anti-China resolution, like seven previous ones, will be met with shameful failure," the People's Daily said in a commentary. Previous attempts to condemn China in Geneva have failed due in part to fears by other countries of economic retaliation from Beijing. Sun defended China's human rights record, saying it had improved constantly in recent years and that Beijing was committed to promoting human rights. The U.S. move "went against the historic tide of opposing confrontation" and seeking cooperation, he said. Differences over human rights should be resolved in talks, Sun said. The U.S. decision to seek censure of China in Geneva was expected to further strain Sino-U.S. relations already dogged by a host of disputes including alleged theft of U.S. nuclear technology. Last year, Washington dropped its earlier practice of supporting a resolution at the Geneva meeting in the belief that Beijing's record on human rights had improved. But relations between the two countries have cooled, partly because of the crackdown on the China Democracy Party. Rubin cited a long list of U.S. complaints against China, including tightened regulations on the press, restrictions on religious practices and intensified controls over Tibet. But the United States still believed in keeping in close contact with the Chinese leadership, Rubin added. The People's Daily said Rubin's "disregard for reality was shocking." It said Washington was not "qualified" to lecture others on human rights because of rights violations in the United States.
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