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DEMOCRACY
Vietnam frees high-profile dissident lawyer
By Cat Barton
Hanoi (AFP) June 27, 2015


China slams US human rights record in annual report
Beijing (AFP) June 26, 2015 - China on Friday slammed the US for a "terrible human rights record", denouncing it for police brutality and global surveillance a day after Washington criticised Beijing's own performance.

In a report sourced mainly from US media, China said the US was "haunted by spreading guns, frequent occurrence of violent crimes, the excessive use of force by police".

It said that US intelligence had used "indiscriminate" torture against terrorist suspects, while "violating human rights in other countries" with drone strikes and mass surveillance programmes.

The document is released each year by China the day after the US State Department issues its annual global human rights report. Beijing does not release rights reports on other countries.

Unlike China, the US is a multiparty democracy but the report declared: "Money is a deciding factor in the US politics, and the US citizens' political rights were not properly protected."

The Chinese Communist Party has repeatedly imprisoned those who openly challenge its right to rule or have protested publicly.

Its state-run media said in December that torture by Chinese police to extract confessions is "not rare", in an unusual admission.

Friday's document, released by China's State Council, or cabinet, largely cited US domestic media websites, including the New York Times, which is blocked by Beijing as part of its Internet censorship regime.

China said the US justice system suffered from "serious racial bias", highlighting police killings of several unarmed black men, which sparked protests over the past year.

The US has "grim problems of racial discrimination, and institutional discrimination against ethnic minorities continued", it added.

Washington's own report on Thursday said that in China "repression and coercion were routine, particularly against organisations and individuals involved in civil and political rights advocacy".

It also noted Beijing's continued repression of ethnic Uighurs and Tibetans.

The report criticised semi-autonomous Hong Kong.

"The most important human rights problems reported were the limited ability of citizens to participate in and change their government through the right to vote in free and fair elections," it said of the city.

Hong Kong lawmakers last week rejected a Beijing-backed electoral reform package which was derided as "fake democracy" during mass protests in 2014, as it required candidates for the city's next leader be vetted by a loyalist committee.

The US report also highlighted limitations on press freedom and violence against the media in Hong Kong, after attacks on some leading journalists and executives.

The city's government hit back Friday saying foreign powers "should not interfere" in its constitutional development and added "great importance" was given to freedom of speech.

Human rights are a long-standing source of tensions between China and the US, which imposed sanctions on Beijing after the 1989 Tiananmen Square crackdown on pro-democracy protesters that left hundreds, by some estimates more than 1,000, dead.

China often says that its rapid economic development in recent decades has led to a greater respect for human rights, and that other countries are not entitled to criticise its record.

One of Vietnam's most prominent dissidents vowed to continue his anti-China activism after being released from prison on Saturday after serving two and a half years on tax evasion charges.

Le Quoc Quan, a Catholic blogger and lawyer from the communist nation, was freed from jail early Saturday in central Quang Nam province and met by family members who had long campaigned for his release.

"I am very happy," he told AFP in his first interview since being freed, saying he would head straight to a hospital for a health check before spending time with his loved ones.

The 43-year-old had been on hunger strike five times in prison with the most recent stint of 14-days ending on June 24.

In a characteristically defiant mood, Quan promised to continue the anti-Beijing activism that first attracted the ire of authorities.

"I have become very concerned again about invasions of China on Vietnamese sovereignty regarding the island," he told AFP in English, referring to construction and land reclamation by Beijing in the South China Sea.

"I pray every day for Vietnam's sovereignty (to be respected)," said the lawyer, adding he looked forward to reading up on the news after being cut off from the world while in prison.

Quan, who blogged on a range of sensitive topics including civil rights, political pluralism and religious freedom, had been in detention since December 2012.

His October 2013 conviction on the tax evasion charges was sharply condemned by the United States and denounced by rights campaigners as bogus and politically motivated.

The activist was also heavily involved in a string of anti-China demonstrations in 2011 over Beijing's territorial claims in the South China Sea.

Vietnam has struggled to balance intense domestic criticism of its handling of China's growing assertiveness in the region against traditionally friendly ties to fellow communists leaders in Beijing.

Anti-China protests in the capital Hanoi have sometimes been allowed to go ahead as a means, analysts say, of sending Beijing a message. But authorities have also broken up demonstrations violently, arresting participants.

- 'Miscarriage of justice' -

A photo posted on Facebook by Quan's brother Le Quoc Quyet Saturday showed a thin but healthy looking Quan smiling and hugging his wife. It attracted more than 1,500 likes in two hours.

He told AFP Saturday that his imprisonment was "a miscarriage of justice" and that he aimed to help others in similar positions who were "still suffering in jail".

The blogger has always denied the charges against him.

Vietnam, a one-party state, is routinely denounced by rights groups and Western governments for its intolerance of political dissent and systematic violations of freedom of religion.

But as Hanoi seeks closer diplomatic and trade ties with former wartime foe America to counter Beijing's increasingly assertive behaviour in the South China Sea, it appears to have toned down persecution of domestic critics.

Last year, after Beijing moved an oil rig into waters claimed by Hanoi, anti-China demonstrations rapidly morphed into violent protests, with foreign-owned factories set ablaze. At least two Chinese workers were killed.

Vietnam is also part of the ongoing negotiations over the proposed Trans Pacific Partnership (TPP), a huge Pacific-wide free trade deal advocated primarily by the United States.

The ruling Communist Party's Secretary General Nguyen Phu Trong will travel to the US next month, the first such visit by a party leader.

In another sign of the changing relationship, Washington recently hailed "progress" on rights issues in Vietnam, saying the number of prisoners of conscience in the country is down from more than 160 in 2013 to around 100, pointing to "virtually no" prosecutions for peaceful political activism or expression this year.

Phil Robertson, deputy Asia director for Human Rights Watch, said he did not think the release was linked to the TPP deal as Quan had served his full sentence.

"But it would be good if the US government uses some of its much talked about leverage to demand that from now on Vietnam stops harassing Quan and lets him exercise his rights without further interference or retaliation."

ltl-ceb/pj/as

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