[新聞] Outgoing US Envoy To China Urges Greater Human Rights
BEIJING, Feb 27, 2014 (AFP) -
Outgoing US ambassador to China Gary Locke on Thursday urged Beijing to
improve its human rights record, in parting remarks just days before he is to
leave the country.
Rights are "universal" values that represent more than economic benefits, he
said, speaking to journalists at the US embassy.
"We call on China to continue to improve -- well we call on China to improve
its record in this area," Locke said.
"There's been great prosperity and an increase in the quality of life and the
standard of living here in China," he said.
"But human rights is more than economic prosperity and the economic
conditions of people, but also fundamental universal rights -- freedom of
speech, freedom of assembly, the ability to practice one's own religion.
"We're very concerned about a recent increase in arrests of activists and
journalists... and we very much are concerned about the arrests and
detentions of people who are engaged in peaceful advocacy."
Locke, who arrived in Beijing in August 2011, drew attention during his
tenure for travelling far from Beijing to visit ethnic Uighur and Tibetan
areas, where rights group say China imposes tight security along with
cultural and religious repression.
The diplomat also earned a reputation as a humble dignitary -- in contrast to
many Chinese officials -- after being seen carrying his own luggage and using
a regular car.
He oversaw two diplomatic dramas in 2012 that required intense negotiation
with Chinese authorities.
In February that year top Wang Lijun, the right-hand man of Bo Xilai, then
the head of the metropolis of Chongqing, fled to the US consulate in Chengdu,
blowing open the scandal surrounding his boss.
Wang soon left the premises to be dealt with by Chinese authorities, and was
ultimately sentenced to 15 years in prison.
A few months later, blind rights activist Chen Guangcheng escaped house
arrest in the eastern province of Shandong and sought refuge at the US
embassy in Beijing.
After days of tense talks involving then-US Secretary of State Hillary
Clinton, Chen and his family were allowed to go to the US.
Locke, whose grandfather emigrated to the United States from the Guangdong
province in southern China, stood out as Washington's first ethnic Chinese
ambassador to the country.
"I'm proud of my Chinese heritage. I'm proud of the great contributions that
China has made to world civilisation over thousands of years," he said
Thursday.
"But I'm thoroughly American. I'm proud of the great values that America has
brought to the entire world and all that America stands for."
Info source: http://tinyurl.com/qxeybg8
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※ 編輯: bepoda 來自: 220.135.198.105 (03/01 22:21)
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