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Report Chides U.S., Anti-Terror Coalition on Human Rights

 

Israel abuses Palestinians human rights on daily basis

WASHINGTON, Jan. 17 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - A major human rights group, on Wednesday, cited new restrictions on freedom in the United States, and warned the U.S. that its declared campaign "war on terrorism" too often inspired allies to revoke civil liberties for political ends.

 

The New York-based Human Rights Watch (HRW) contained these and other findings in its annual report, covering nearly 70 nations.

 

"Terrorists believe that anything goes in the name of their cause," said Kenneth Roth, executive director of HRW. "The fight against terror must not buy into that logic. For too many countries, the anti-terror mantra has provided a new reason to ignore human rights."

 

The report also cited restrictions on freedom inside the United States, such as proposed military tribunals for suspected terrorists, could compromise Washington's ability to criticize rights abuses in other nations.

 

Declaring the deadly September 11 attacks on New York's World Trade Center and the Pentagon outside Washington as "antithetical to human rights values," the HRW report said too many governments substituted expediency for a firm commitment to human rights.

 

"As many of the world's governments join the fight against al-Qaeda, they face a fundamental choice," HRW stated. "They must decide whether this battle provides an opportunity to reaffirm human rights principles or a new reason to ignore them. They must determine whether this is a moment to embrace values governing means as well as ends, or an excuse to subordinate means to ends.

 

"Unfortunately, the coalition's conduct so far has not been auspicious," the annual report added. "Its leading members have violated human rights principles at home and overlooked human rights transgressions among their partners. They have substituted expediency for the firm commitment to human rights that alone can defeat the rationale of terrorism."

 

Human Rights Watch cited the George W. Bush administration of undermining the respect for human rights domestically through anti-terror legislation and its decision to seek future military tribunals of suspected al-Qaeda members.

 

"The so-called USA Patriot Act," said the HRW report, "permits the indefinite detention of non-deportable non-citizens once the attorney general 'certifies' that he has 'reasonable grounds to believe' that the individual is engaged in terrorist activities or endangers national security.

 

These broad and vague criteria could allow the attorney general to certify and detain any alien in the United States who had any connection, however tenuous or distant in time, with a group that had once unlawfully used a weapon to endanger a person."

 

The human rights watchdog added that "the virtual lack of procedural protections in the order raised the prospect of suspects being tried, convicted, and even executed with no appearance before an independent judicial tribunal, no right to appeal, no right to a public trial, no presumption of innocence, no right to confront evidence or testimony against them, and no requirement that proof be established beyond a reasonable doubt."

 

Human Rights Watch pointed out that the United States had routinely objected to similar military tribunals in Peru, Nigeria, Russia, and elsewhere.

 

"By suddenly proposing to sponsor similar travesties of justice in the face of its own security threats," argued the HRW report, "the U.S. government compromises its capacity to defend human rights abroad. Indeed, tomorrow's military dictators need do nothing more than photocopy the Bush order to secure a repressive mechanism that promises to be highly effective in warding off U.S. criticism."

 

In Russia, Human Rights Watch accused President Vladimir Putin of embracing the anti-terrorist rhetoric to defend his government's brutal campaign in Chechnya and the West downplaying earlier criticism of Moscow's abuses.

 

China took a similar position to defend its response to political agitation in Xinjiang province.

 

The HRW report alleges that many governments have closed channels for dissent and thus encouraged “radical” groups.

 

"Many of the policies of the major powers, both before and after September 11, have undermined efforts to build a global culture of human rights," states the HRW annual report.

 

"These governments often embraced human rights only in theory while subverting them in practice. Reversing these policies is essential to building the strong human rights culture needed to reject terrorism."

 

The HRW report argued that "many in the [Middle East] see Western tolerance for human rights abuse reflected in the failure to rein in Israeli abuse of Palestinians or to restructure sanctions against Iraq to minimize the suffering of the Iraqi people. Such policies - both closely followed in the region - suggest that the West's commitment to human rights is one of convenience, to be forsaken when abuses are committed by an ally or in the name of containing a foe."

 

The watchdog report added that the "grievance has become all the more acute since September 2000 as the death toll mounts from Israeli-Palestinian violence and as Iraqi sanctions drag on with no indication that Saddam Hussein will acquiesce to U.N. demands."

 

Human Rights Watch also claimed there was a "shameful silence" by the United States and other Western nations of abuses by governments in Saudi Arabia and Egypt where patterns of repression seem to promise stability.

 

"They leave people with the desperate choice of tolerating the status quo, exile or violence," said the report. "Frequently, as political options are closed off, the voices of nonviolent dissent are upstaged by a politics of radical opposition."

 

Thus Saudi Arabia and Egypt can credibly portray themselves as bulwarks against extremism because the political center has been "systemically silenced," the report said.

 

Since the September 11 attacks, several governments touted their own domestic struggles as fights against terrorism, the report contended.

 

Uzbekistan's government, which has allied itself with the U.S.-led anti-terrorism coalition, was singled out by the HRW reports as particularly repressive and an illustration of the West's selectivity on human rights.

 

The country has no political parties and no independent media. Muslims caught praying outside the state-controlled mosque are tortured and given long prison sentences. The State Department excluded Uzbekistan from its list of countries that repress religious freedom, the report said.

 

In Europe, Human Rights Watch said, too many countries stepped up anti-immigrant rhetoric and further restricted the rights of migrants, refugees, and asylum seekers, in the name of fighting terrorism.

 

Britain has proposed emergency anti-terrorism legislation that would deny some asylum seekers an individual hearing, classify as a "terrorist" any foreigner with ill-defined "links" to terrorist organizations, and allow authorities to indefinitely detain them.

 

In Hungary, all Afghan refugees were transported to special detention facilities. In Greece, some migrants arriving on ships were denied access to asylum procedures and given fifteen-day expulsion orders.

 

"In the long term, this trend is counterproductive," Human Rights Watch said. "If the logic of terrorism, not just immediate terrorist threats, is ultimately to be defeated, governments must redouble their commitment to international standards, not indulge in a new round of excuses to ignore them."  
 

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