VERSIONS: روسيا اليوم NOTICIAS FREEVIDEO ИНОТВ RTД
breakingnews
Go to main page   USA   News   America's human rights rhetoric tarnished by actions  
MORE ON THE STORY
Image from freeordie.org 10.12.2010, 22:59 2 comments

China hypocrisy: US critical on human rights, but happy to do business

When it comes to human rights in China, the US talks tough but rarely takes action. But, the US is happy to do business in China.

10.11.2010, 02:36 9 comments

America’s human rights hypocrisy

The human rights record of the United States was put under an international microscope, as the UN Human Rights Council issued 228 recommendations on how Washington can address violations.

Chairman of the Nobel Peace Prize committee Thorbjoern Jagland sits next to the reserved vacant chair for the Nobel Laureate and dissident Liu Xiaobo (portrait at left), during a ceremony for the laureate at the city hall in Oslo, on December 10, 2010 (AFP Photo / Scanpix / Pool / Heiko Junge) 10.12.2010, 16:34 5 comments

No peace as China slams 2010 Nobel winner

Arguing that “most nations” are against this year’s winner of the Nobel Peace Prize, Chinese dissident Liu Xiaobo, Beijing promises it will not be deterred from its path of economic development.

Image from sfbayview.com 10.12.2010, 22:14 7 comments

Mumia Abu-Jamal: A symbol of flawed justice

While American prisons overflow with prisoners, radical journalist and activist Mumia Abu-Jamal has been on death row for almost three decades with no end to his legal process in sight as he continues his fight against the US criminal justice system.

10.11.2010, 01:35 3 comments

Mumia Abu-Jamal: World’s most famous death row prisoner

An honorary citizen of over 20 cities around the world but a prisoner in the United States of America. He is called the ‘voice of the voiceless’ yet he has been on death row for half his life.

America's human rights rhetoric tarnished by actions

Published: 11 December, 2010, 00:40
Edited: 12 December, 2010, 20:44

(13.4Mb) embed video

TAGS: Military, Politics, Human rights, USA, Marina Portnaya


62 years ago, the United Nations adopted its Universal Declaration of Human Rights, making today, International Human Rights Day.

America's first lady at the time, Eleanor Roosevelt, helped inspire the 1948 agreement – a global pledge critics say the US is failing to follow.

Which speaks louder… actions? Or words?

In September US President Barack Obama addressed the international community at the United Nations pledging America’s commitment to International Human Rights.

The 1948 document includes 30 articles, which outline basic standards of life – inalienable rights – for all people.

Article 3 says everyone has the right to life, liberty and security of person.

Political commentator Nima Sharaizi accuses the US of falling short of fulfilling several of the principals it helped create.

With every drone attack, with every invasion and occupation of a country. With every overthrow of a foreign government that the United States happens not to like or happens not to agree with. Every one of those are a violation of that one article,” he said.

Article 5 says no one shall be subjected to torture or to cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment.

With every detainee, kidnapped and rendition and tortured in Guantanamo or Baghram or elsewhere, that’s yet another violation, “said Shariazi.

The land of liberty is also the land of the incarcerated with the world’s largest prison population. 2.3 million people are behind bars, while more than three thousand languish on death row.

Article 25 – Everyone has the right to a standard of living, including food, clothing, housing and medical care.

At the dawn of a new millennium, we set concrete goals to free our fellow men, women and children from the injustice of extreme poverty,” said Obama during his September 22nd speech to the United Nations General Assembly.

US figures indicate nearly 44 million Americans are living in poverty, while even more people lack access to affordable health care.As 2010 comes to an end, 15 million are officially unemployed and an estimated 1 million US families are set to lose their homes this year alone.

As President, I have made it clear that the United States will do our part,” Obama.

Last month, the UN Human Rights Commission released a report including 228 recommendations on how the US could improve its human rights record. A record stained with accusations of police brutality, racial profiling of minorities, and Islamophobia.

Oakland PD, LAPD, Chicago PD. This isn’t just happening in once city, this is happening all over America and it has to stop,” said Sharon Moseby, the mother of a Los Angeles, CA police shooting victim.

The country most vocal in chastising others for what it sees as human rights abuses is now taking heat for violating a universal declaration it co-wrote.Maybe American poet Ralph Waldo Emerson put it best when saying, “what you do speaks so loudly, I cannot hear what you say.”

The Obama administration is on a mission to revamp the US reputation regarding human rights, but little has changed explained Brian Becker, the national coordinator for the A.N.S.W.E.R. Coalition in Washington, DC.

The Obama administration is on an effort to rehabilitate the image of the United States, which became known as torture Inc. during the Bush years,” he said. “The Universal Declaration of Human Rights Article 5 says no one shall be subjected to torture, degrading or inhumane treatment and clearly the United States government under Bush did that, continues to extol that.”

He explained Obama’s need to rescue the American image is why agreed to have the United States subjected to the UN Human Rights Panel for the first time.

Journalist Pepe Escobar, a Latin America correspondent for the Asia Times said much of his time has been spent covering the Middle East and Central Asia, where he witnessed human rights violations by the US.

At any one time around 2003, 2004, and 2005 there could have been thousands of unaccounted prisoners over there. Anything from a stranded Taliban to street kids in Kabul, just because they were suspected of being terrorists,” Escobar said.

He told the story of a German citizen who was kidnapped, tortured and held as terrorists by the UC. In fact, the individual merely shared the same name as another person who was actually wanted.

He was a German citizen, but he had the name of terrorist,” he said. “When the US discovered they were mistaken, they pressured the German government not to reveal that he had been kidnapped by the CIA and he was tortured for five months. That says everything about human rights under the Bush years.”

+3 (3 votes)
 
Back to top
next MORE NEWS
Image from freeordie.org 10.12.2010, 22:59 2 comments

China hypocrisy: US critical on human rights, but happy to do business

When it comes to human rights in China, the US talks tough but rarely takes action. But, the US is happy to do business in China.

Image from White house photostream 11.12.2010, 02:16 9 comments

Obama ignores clemency for political prisoners

President Obama fails to free political prisoners in the US

Stanley Tse December 14, 2010, 07:18
+1

Obama is only trying to finish off what Bush Jr. started and also followed in the foot steps of Bush senior. The US came to power lightning fast and looks to be winding down almost as quick! 
They keep putting pressure on China to show leadership in the Korean crisis saying that they are now a superpower. Well they are actually a developing country and the US is using this as an excuse to start a war. 
When China eventually does become a true superpower, I'd be afraid to think of what they'd do if they followed in the US' foot steps!


Ted December 13, 2010, 19:10
+1

Obama is not the solution; he is part of the problem. Someone needs to explain to him money doesn't grow on trees. Every new bailout hurts the American people at large and for what? More bureaucracy. He will go down as one of the worst leaders of this country.. If we survive.

Kihnu December 11, 2010, 16:01
+1

Anyone who wants to understand America should realize four characteristic of this country: (1). America exists to serve the interests of a select power elite who control the country.  The people are kindhearted and generous, but they play no part in the decision making; (2). The power elite plays by their own self-anointed rules; (3). The power elite doesn't give a damn about any other country's interests or feelings if they do not further their own self-interest and greed; and, (4). The power elite will spread death and destruction upon any weak nation that does not do their bidding, and will blatantly lie to their own people to get them to sacrifice their blood and lives at the altar of their greed.
"Human rights" rhetoric is meaningless to the greedy power elite of America.