Mohon dimaaf terlebih dahulu Pak Sato Sakaki,
  ini ada lagi yang keras kepala seperti Chavez, Morales, Soekarno dan Soviet 
Union yang nekad  melawan politik luar negeri George Bush dan AS umumnya. 
Politik itu sudah mematikan ratusan ribu orang sipil Irak. PLN AS pernah 
menyebabkan tewasnya 2 juta orang Vietnam, dan sebelumnya mengakibatkan 
terbunuhnya sampai 3 juta manusia Indonesia. george tidak punya kata 
"kemanusiaan" dalam kamusnya. Pak Sato punya?
   
  Sebelum Bapak Sato sebagai fan berat si George akan menumpahkan segala 
kemarahan kepada RRC yang berdaulat dan sekarang banyak sekali membeli obligasi 
AS karena deficit si imperialis itu begitu besar, dan menantang kiri kanan 
seperti kuda lumping lebih baik dipikirkan sangat dalam dan lebar dahulu, 
supaya jangan lagi tertimpa rasa malu karena dikatakan kurang pengetahuan untuk 
berdebat secara serius.
   
  Berdebatlah dalam jalur yang Bpk sanggup saja. OK?
  TCh

Holy Uncle <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
          Posted on Fri, Mar. 09,

China's reply: U.S. has violated human rights

By Edward Cody
Washington Post

BEIJING - Responding to U.S. complaints, China charged yesterday that the 
Bush administration had no standing to criticize other countries on human 
rights because its own record was full of blemishes at home and abroad.

The Chinese accusation, in a retort to the State Department's annual 
human-rights report issued Tuesday, called particular attention to what it 
said were abuses committed by U.S. troops and intelligence agents against 
terrorist suspects in Afghanistan, Iraq, and Guantanamo Bay in Cuba. But it 
also underlined what it described as increased willingness by Washington to 
spy on its own citizens by monitoring their telephone calls, computer 
connections and travels.

"As in previous years, the State Department pointed the finger at 
human-rights conditions in more than 190 countries and regions, including 
China, but avoided touching on the human-rights situation in the United 
States," said the report, issued by Premier Wen Jiabao's office. "We urge 
the U.S. government to acknowledge its own human-rights problems and stop 
interfering in other countries' internal affairs under the pretext of human 
rights."

The Chinese response to U.S. human-rights concerns has become a fixture over 
the last eight years. In the first years, it centered on a contention that 
human rights should be defined to include social and economic improvements, 
such as health care and education, where the Chinese government can point to 
rapid progress.

These arguments were raised again this year, with charges that racial 
minorities, women and children suffer disadvantages in the United States.

But more recently, the report's tone has sharpened and the sweep of its 
counteraccusations has broadened as reports accumulate of U.S. abuses abroad 
against foreigners suspected of connections to terrorism. These include 
accusations of kidnapping, torture, and imprisonment without legal recourse 
- the same abuses often raised by the United States with Chinese 
authorities. The accusations are read by many Chinese as reasons U.S. 
officials have no right to criticize China over similar human-rights 
shortcomings.

For instance, the latest U.S. official to raise human-rights concerns in 
Beijing was Deputy Secretary of State John Negroponte, who visited here over 
the weekend. In his last job, as President Bush's intelligence coordinator, 
Negroponte oversaw the CIA, whose employees are heavily involved in the 
detentions and interrogations that have come under sharp criticism from 
human-rights organizations and that were cited by the Chinese report.

"The United States has a flagrant record of violating the Geneva Convention 
in systematically abusing prisoners during the Iraqi war and the war in 
Afghanistan," the report said, adding later: "A Human Rights Watch report in 
July 2006 said torture and other abuses against detainees in U.S. custody in 
Iraq were authorized and routine."

The Chinese statement was based largely on reports from U.S. newspapers and 
international human-rights organizations. But it cited the United Nations in 
singling out for particular criticism a new U.S. law, the U.S. Military 
Commissions Act, governing how much force may by used in interrogating 
terrorism suspects.

"Martin Sheinin, U.N. special rapporteur on the promotion and protection of 
human rights and fundamental freedom, issued a statement noting that a 
number of provisions of the act contradict the universal and fundamental 
principles of fair trial standards and due process enshrined in Common 
Article 3 of the Geneva Conventions and relevant provisions of the 
International Convention on Civil Rights and Political Rights," the report 
said.

http://www.philly.com/mld/philly/news/nation/16866209.htm

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