14.3.2008
"Russia
is open for a human rights dialogue with interested states,
both in a bilateral format and in international organizations.
In particular, we presume that the procedure for a universal
periodic review of the human rights performance of all countries
of the world, created by the U.N. Human Rights Council, will
make it possible without bias or prejudice on a regular basis
to discus all existing problems with a view to their joint
settlement", stated the Russian Ministry of Foreign Affairs
in a press release issued commenting on the U.S. State Department's
annual report on March.
"The
report is yet another demonstration of the "double
standards" in U.S. human rights policy. It clearly
exhibits a division of HR rights for external and domestic
consumption", the report further stated.
Full
text of the communique‚ issued by the Russian MFA
The
U.S. State Department's annual report on human rights practices
around the world again in a mentor-like tone voices a hackneyed
collection of claims regarding Russia, such as departure
from the principles of democratic government, the harassment
of dissenters and restrictions on freedom of speech and
of the press. Many passages are copied from previous reports:
One gets the impression that the State Department just hand-picked
material to fit pre-articulated conclusions.
The
document, unfortunately, abounds in groundless accusations,
citations of unverified and obviously engaged sources, mistakes
and juggling of facts, particularly in latest event coverage.
We would like, in particular, to remind our American colleagues
alleging nonconformance of December's State Duma elections
to OSCE standards that the Office for Democratic Institutions
and Human Rights' politicized approaches were never approved
by the OSCE member states as generally binding rules of
conduct. Further, it is the U.S. and other western countries
that have been refusing to work out and approve clear and
distinct principles.
The
report is yet another demonstration of the "double
standards" in U.S. human rights policy. It clearly
exhibits a division of human rights for external and domestic
consumption. How else can one explain that the United States
- which has essentially legalized torture, applies capital
punishment to minors, denies responsibility for war crimes
and massive human rights abuses in Iraq and Afghanistan,
refuses to join a series of human rights treaties - distortedly
comments on the situation in other countries? Meanwhile,
the U.S. uses the struggle to spread democracy and the defense
of human rights as a cover, totally disregarding systemic
problems within its own country.
But
then we did not expect from the State Department's latest
opus an objective assessment of the human rights situation
in Russia. After all, the U.S. has long since been regarding
human rights as a foreign policy tool.
Russia
is open for a human rights dialogue with interested states,
both in a bilateral format and in international organizations.
In particular, we presume that the procedure for a universal
periodic review of the human rights performance of all countries
of the world, created by the U.N. Human Rights Council,
will make it possible without bias or prejudice on a regular
basis to discuss all existing problems with a view to their
joint settlement. We are currently awaiting with interest
such a UN report on human rights observance in the U.S.;
for in the U.S. itself, unlike Russia, no reports are released.
We
are convinced that politicizing human rights issues and
distorting the human rights situation in various countries
tends to devalue the principles and purposes of international
cooperation in this field rather than helping to solve existing
problems.
Courtesy
- Russian Ministry of Foreign Affairs
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