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China report on US human rights violations reveals American hypocrisy, double standards
By:Xinhua
update:March 25,2021

Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY) holds up a sign that reads "Stop Asian Hate" as he speaks at a rally against hate in Columbus Park on March 21, 2021 in the Chinatown neighborhood of Manhattan in New York, New York. [Photo/Agencies]
 
March 25,2021 --  The hypocrisy and double standards of the United States, which has long masqueraded as a defender of human rights, have been laid bare in a new report on human rights violations in the country.
 
The Report on Human Rights Violations in the United States in 2020, released on Wednesday by China's State Council Information Office, cited among many examples the tragic outcomes of America's out-of-control COVID-19 situation, hate politics, systemic racial discrimination, and soaring numbers of shootings.
 
"The US government, instead of introspecting on its own terrible human rights record, kept making irresponsible remarks on the human rights situation in other countries, exposing its double standards and hypocrisy on human rights," the report read.
 
It urged the US side to drop its hypocrisy, bullying, big stick diplomacy and double standards and work with the international community to build a community with a shared future for humanity.
 
HUMAN TRAGEDY
 
Following the US government's reckless COVID-19 response, the virus spread beyond control in the United States and became a human tragedy that has claimed more than 500,000 American lives, according to the report.
 
Home to less than 5 percent of the world's population, the US accounts for more than a quarter of the world's confirmed COVID-19 cases and nearly one-fifth of global deaths from the virus.
 
The then US leaders ignored warnings from experts, downplayed the seriousness of the pandemic, and released misleading signals to the public, read the report.
 
The United States was too slow in locking down cities and limiting social contact, and too hasty to restart its economy due to political concerns, it added, citing epidemiologist and former head of the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) William Foege who called the pandemic "a slaughter" for the country.
 
The report drew attention to the disorder of US democratic institutions, which has led to political chaos, further tearing the fabric of the country's society apart.
 
Money-tainted politics is turning US elections into a "one-man show" for the wealthy, and people's confidence in the American democratic system has hit a 20-year low, it said.
 
Amid increasing political polarization, hate politics evolved into a national plague and the Capitol was stormed during post-election riots, which shocked the world.
 
"The scenes (the US Capitol building violence) we have seen are the result of lies and more lies, of division and contempt for democracy, of hatred and rabble-rousing -- even from the very highest levels," said German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier, the report noted.
 
"I CAN'T BREATHE"
 
Ethnic minority groups have suffered "systematic racial discrimination" in the United States, the report read.
 
African Americans are "three times" as likely as whites to be killed by police and "one in four" young Asian Americans have been targets of racial bullying, it added.

 
Protesters march through downtown Minneapolis during the "I Can't Breathe" Silent March for Justice a day before jury selection is scheduled to begin for the trial of Derek Chauvin, the former Minneapolis policeman accused of killing George Floyd, in Minneapolis, Minnesota, US March 7, 2021. [Photo/Agencies]
 
The report noted that the death of African American George Floyd, who called out "I can't breathe" as a police officer kneeled on his neck, has sparked a national outcry.
 
Ensuing protests for racial justice erupted in 50 states. The US government suppressed demonstrators by force, and more than 10,000 people were arrested, it noted.
 
The report also touched on other topics such as the record-breaking gun trade and shooting incidents in the US
 
"More than 41,500 people were killed in shooting incidents across the United States in the year, an average of more than 110 a day, and there were 592 mass shootings nationwide, an average of more than 1.6 a day," it read.
 
Concerning the growing polarization between the rich and the poor in the United States, the report noted, "The richest 1 percent of Americans have a combined net worth that is 16.4 times that of the poorest 50 percent."
 
TROUBLEMAKER FOR GLOBAL SECURITY
 
At a time when global unity is needed to fight the pandemic, the United States persists in pursuing an "America First" agenda, isolationism and unilateralism, wantonly imposing sanctions, bullying and threatening international organizations, and treating asylum seekers with cruelty.
 
In doing so, the US is becoming the "biggest troublemaker" for global security and stability, the report said.
 
By imposing sanctions against International Criminal Court staff and bullying other countries, the United States has escaped international probes into possible war crimes in other countries and police violence targeting its own citizens, it said.
 
It continued to comment on the unilateral sanctions imposed by Washington on countries including Iran, Cuba, Venezuela and Syria, noting that the sanctions made it difficult for the countries to obtain necessary anti-pandemic medical supplies in a timely manner.
 
Asylum seekers have been treated cruelly in the United States, it added, noting that the US government had expelled at least 8,800 unaccompanied immigrant children despite serious protection risks during the COVID-19 outbreak.
 
The then US president's pardon of Blackwater contractors convicted of war crimes in Iraq violated US obligations under international law and had the effect of emboldening others to commit such crimes in the future, it said.
 
Experts say the report, mainly based on widely circulated surveys, analysis reports and media reports, came in sharp contrast to reports from the US State Department, which were released in the name of "human rights" and fabricated groundless charges against China.
 
The report from China "is not meant to interfere in another country's internal affairs, but to faithfully reveal the true human rights situation in the US," said Chang Jian, director of the human rights study center at Nankai University.
 
"We welcome fact-based constructive criticism from others, rather than attacks on China's human rights situation with trumped-up accusations based on lies, distortions and ideological biases, as the United States has done in its annual report," said Li Xiaojun, an official with the State Council Information Office, at a briefing on the report on Wednesday.
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