home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Newsgroups: misc.activism.progressive
- Path: sparky!uunet!haven.umd.edu!darwin.sura.net!wupost!mont!pencil.cs.missouri.edu!rich
- From: rich@pencil.cs.missouri.edu (Rich Winkel)
- Subject: US foreign policy out of touch with human rights data
- Message-ID: <1992Sep6.082332.9943@mont.cs.missouri.edu>
- Followup-To: alt.activism.d
- Originator: rich@pencil.cs.missouri.edu
- Sender: news@mont.cs.missouri.edu
- Nntp-Posting-Host: pencil.cs.missouri.edu
- Organization: PACH
- Date: Sun, 6 Sep 1992 08:23:32 GMT
- Approved: map@pencil.cs.missouri.edu
- Lines: 123
-
- /** reg.samerica: 185.0 **/
- ** Topic: UNITED STATES: foreign policy out o **
- ** Written 5:33 pm Sep 4, 1992 by jbinder in cdp:reg.samerica **
- From: James Binder <jbinder>
- Subject: UNITED STATES: foreign policy out o
-
- /* Written 12:11 am Sep 3, 1992 by newsdesk in cdp:ips.englibrary */
- /* ---------- "UNITED STATES: foreign policy out o" ---------- */
- Copyright Inter Press Service 1992, all rights reserved. Permission to re-
- print within 7 days of original date only with permission from 'newsdesk'.
-
- Title: UNITED STATES: foreign policy out of touch with human rights data
-
- washington, aug 31 (ips) -- while the u.s. state department has
- made important improvements in reporting on human rights
- conditions in foreign countries, its information is not being
- translated into foreign policy, says a u.s. human rights group.
-
- in a 447-page study critiquing the department's 1991 'country
- reports' on the human rights situation in almost 170 countries,
- the new york-based lawyers' committee on human rights (lchr)
- concludes that ''accurate reporting alone is not enough''.
-
- ''the reports risk being regarded in splendid isolation as a
- commendable but academic exercise unless u.s. policy comes to
- reflect the information on human rights so comprehensively
- assembled,'' the lchr report said.
-
- the group charged that the dissonance between washington's ties
- with china, paraguay, colombia, morocco, somalia, and haiti and
- the human rights conditions of those countries is particularly
- evident.
-
- the subject of the lchr report is the annual 'country reports'
- sent by the state department to congress in early february each
- year since the congress first ordered the government to provide
- human rights reports to it in 1978.
-
- those reports have grown from about 600 pages to almost 1,700
- pages in each of the past three years. they are now regarded by
- many human rights organisations as the most comprehensive report
- on human rights practices and developments in specific countries
- available.
-
- in the early 1980s, during the administration of former
- president ronald reagan, the reports were often criticised by
- major rights groups as being heavily politicised, particularly in
- countries considered sensitive by washington.
-
- thus, reports on nicaragua through most of the 1980s
- consistently stressed violations by the sandinista government,
- which was being challenged by u.s.-supported 'contra' rebels,
- while on nearby el salvador, the state department downplayed
- abuses by that country's armed forces.
-
- by the end of the 1980s, however, human rights groups noted
- that the reports had become more balanced and reliable. they
- credited both the decline in geopolitical competition between the
- united states and the soviet union and the rise in influence of
- the official in charge of the reports, assistant secretary of
- state for human rights richard schifter. (more/ips)
-
- united states: foreign policy out of touch with human rights data(2-e)
-
- united states: foreign policy (2)
-
- schifter, who resigned earlier this year, reportedly out of
- unhappiness with bush's continued defence of close ties with
- china, has since endorsed the presidential candidacy of the
- president's democratic challenger, arkansas governor bill clinton.
-
- ''while most welcome, the improved reporting has underscored
- the inconsistency in u.s. policy towards several gross violators
- of human rights,'' according to the new report.
-
- ''human rights considerations are not the sole criterion
- governing u.s. foreign policy. however, where egregious
- violations exist, experience has shown that the u.s. fails to
- respond at its peril,'' says the lchr.
-
- in particular, the report cited washington's refusal to
- sanction iraq before baghdad invaded kuwait in aug. 1990, despite
- several consecutive ''hard-hitting'' reports on human rights in
- iraq by the state department, including the use of poison gases
- against kurds during the late 1980s.
-
- it also noted that washington has ignored the serious human
- rights situations depicted in the reports on china and paraguay
- which receive preferential trade treatment despite serious abuses
- against worker rights, and on china and morocco, which receive
- large amounts of military aid.
-
- on haiti, according to the lchr, the state department has
- reported on serious abuses of human rights, yet pursues a policy
- of forcibly returning asylum seekers.
-
- and it points out that the administration forthrightly
- condemned during 1991 the forcible repatriation of vietnamese
- refugees in hong kong -- a policy which it has pursued itself with
- respect to haitians who have fled the island since the ouster 11
- months ago of president jean-bertrand aristide.
-
- to address the gap between information and policy, the group
- said, the state department should reactivate an inter-agency group
- which was disbanded by reagan in 1981.
-
- chaired by the deputy secretary of state, the group included
- representatives of relevant state department bureaus, and
- delegates from the treasury, defence, agriculture, commerce, and
- labour departments, the national security council, and the u.s.
- agency for international development.
-
- regular meetings of such a group could better coordinate policy
- towards countries which have human rights problems, according to
- the report.
-
- warren christopher, a prominent los angeles attorney who
- chaired the group under president jimmy carter, is considered a
- front-runner for secretary of state if clinton wins the november
- elections. (end/ips/ip/jl/yjc/92)
-
- ** End of text from cdp:reg.samerica **
-
-