|
Paris -
New York - Hong Kong, 12 November 2002 : On the eve of the EU/China
dialogue, to take place on November 13 in Beijing, the FIDH
and HRIC call on the EU to put its acts in line with its declarations
of principle.
In January
2001, the EU fixed benchmarks to assess the results of its dialogue
with China. Those benchmarks include notably cooperation with
the UN human rights mechanisms, freedom of religion and belief,
respect for the right to organise (freedom of association),
respect for cultural rights and religious freedoms in Tibet
and Xinjiang.
The FIDH
and HRIC addressed to the EU a briefing note giving a clear
picture of the present situation in the fields which are on
the agenda of the November 13 session of the EU/China dialogue.
That document evidences not only the lack of progress with regard
to death penalty, torture, freedom of expression, information
and association, discrimination against ethnic minorities, violations
of refugees'rights, and cooperation with the UN. It also shows
clearly that there is no improvement in the general human rights
situation, and there is a serious degradation in other areas
such as extra-legal detentions, repression against ethnic minorities
in the name of fighting terrorism, and extensive use of the
death penalty for non-violent offences .
As repeatedly
affirmed by the European Union, "the dialogue is an acceptable
option only if enough progress is achieved and reflected on
the ground". However, the EU and China are engaged in the
human rights dialogue since five years and no positive and effective
results have been noted on the ground. The FIDH and HRIC are
therefore convinced that if Human Rights are to be addressed
through the diplomatic channel behind closed doors, public scrutiny
is necessary to induce China to achieve progress through the
dialogue. Moreover, the FIDH and HRIC consider that such a public
scrutiny is a necessary condition for the dialogue to be credible.
The FIDH
and HRIC therefore call on the EU to duly address their concerns
on November 13, and to make clear that the EU would draw the
consequences of the absence of genuine progress in those fields,
notably by tabling a resolution on the human rights situation
in China at the next session of the UN Commission on human rights.
The FIDH
and HRIC also take this opportunity to remind that the EU/China
human rights seminars and the political dialogue cannot be considered
as two totally separated exercises : the seminars gathering
EU and Chinese experts twice a year should be the occasion to
address, from an expert perspective, the reality of the human
rights situation in China. Our organisations believe that main
NGOs working on human rights in China should be systematically
associated to that exercise in order to feed the discussions
with concrete examples and facts. The seminars cannot be confined
in a ivory tower and Chinese academics should be encouraged
to look into rights in practice in China.
Contact :
- FIDH : 00 33 1 43 55 25 18
- HRIC : 00 1 212 239 44 95
|