China suggests U.S. examine its own human rights record
China took a tit-for-tat swipe at the United States on Thursday for abusing Iraqi prisoners of war and other human rights violations in a report released days after Washington criticized China's rights record. The State Department accused China in its annual human rights report on Monday of using the global war against terrorism to crack down on peaceful opponents of its rule in Muslim Xinjiang and of committing persistent rights abuses in 2004. China's State Council, or cabinet, issued its own report for the sixth year in a row, citing atrocities by U.S. troops against Iraqi prisoners of war which "exposed the dark side" of the human rights record of the United States. "The scandal shocked ... humanity and was condemned by the international community," said the report, carried by the official Xinhua news agency. Ironically, the United States posed as the "world human rights police" while keeping silent on its own misdeeds, it said. Iraqi prisoners of war at the Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq (news - web sites) were kept naked, stacked on top of each other, forced to engage in sex acts, struck by American jailers and photographed. In the only trial so far in the scandal, the alleged leader of the abuse was jailed for 10 years. Instead of indulging itself in "unreasonably censuring" other countries for human rights abuses, Washington should reflect on its behavior and take its own human rights problems seriously, the Chinese report said. "The double standards of the United States on human rights and its exercise of hegemonism and power politics under the pretext of promoting human rights will certainly put itself in an isolated and passive position and beget opposition from all just members of the international community," it added. The report accused Washington of keeping under wraps half of its 20-odd detention centers worldwide which hold "terrorist suspects" to avoid international scrutiny. China's performance on rights was "far from perfect," Foreign Ministry spokesman Liu Jianchao told a news conference, citing the gap between rich and poor and between the booming coastal provinces and the impoverished hinterland. China broke off a human rights dialogue last March after the United States urged a UN watchdog to condemn what it called China's backsliding on rights. [
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