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China delisted as human rights violator? |
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Written by Stumo
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Thursday, 13 March 2008 |
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The State Department says China is no longer among the worst human
rights violators. Facts escape these guys. Like when the
federal government annually finds no evidence that China manipulates
its currency. Human Rights Watch says this:
"We and others have documented a sharp uptick in human rights
violations directly related to preparations for the Olympics," said
Phelim Kine, Asia researcher with New York-based Human Rights Watch.
And here are some nice examples of China's improving human rights record.
In the past week, Chinese police clashed with monks demonstrating
for independence in Lhasa, capital of the remote mountainous region
Tibet. Human rights activist Hu Jia, jailed after organizing a petition
saying that Chinese wanted "human rights, not the Olympics," was
informed that his trial on charges of subverting state power could
begin as early as this month. A prominent human rights lawyer, Teng
Biao, was abducted by the Beijing Public Security Bureau and then
released two days later. ...
[A government report] It documents tightening controls on
religious freedom in Tibet, where many monks view the exiled Dalai Lama
as their spiritual leader, and in Xinjiang Uighur Autonomous Region,
with its mostly Muslim population. It noted that the Chinese government
continues to harass and arrest activists, writers and defense lawyers
seeking to exercise their rights under Chinese law. It cited reports
that 29 journalists and 51 cyber-dissidents and Internet users were in
jail at the end of 2007.
Back to currency manipulation. The best bill out there was
drafted by Representatives Duncan Hunter and Tim Ryan, which declares
currency manipulation can be countervailed. Dark horse bills are
ready to combat the Ryan-Hunter bills by allowing the Treasury
Department to declare whether currency manipulation exists. We
see now why the administration (and probably any administration) cannot
be trusted with this authority.
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In the news
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Today, the Labor Department reported the economy lost 84,000 payroll jobs in August, after losing 60,000 jobs in July. This was much worse than was expected, as the full weight of banking crisis, rising oil prices and imports from China drive up unemployment.
Unemployment rose to 6.1 percent from 5.7 percent in July. Factoring in discouraged workers, unemployment is closer to 7.7 percent.
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Read more...
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