Greece accused of human rights violations
September 2002
In a report
released on Tuesday, the campaign group referred to 66 cases of alleged human
rights violations in the member state, which takes on the EU presidency in
January 2003.
It is now
calling on the EU to act decisively to combat abuses within its borders.
“Amnesty
International believes that serious infractions of fundamental rights in one EU
member state are not just the responsibility of that country, but should also
be the proper concern of the EU as a whole,” Dick Oosting, director of
Amnesty’s EU office in Brussels, said in a statement.
The group is
urging the current EU president, Denmark, to put in place a system of “real
accountability” to tackle human rights abuses before it hands over the reins to
Greece at the end of the year.
The report
echoes the findings of a similar study published in June by a coalition of
European and Mediterranean human rights groups.
Meanwhile,
Amnesty has also called on the EU to expose China to harsher criticism of its
human rights record.
It feels that
the concern expressed by leading EU figures at their meeting with Chinese
premier Zhu Rongji in Copenhagen this week are unlikely to persuade his regime
to stop its use of strong-arm tactics to quell democratic dissent.
Amnesty claims
the Union’s ‘dialogue’ with Beijing is “effectively a monologue, a self-serving
exercise in which the EU is being taken for a ride”.
“Voicing
concern at summits is just not good enough when your partner refuses to
listen,” said Oosting.
“It is time
for the EU to strike a different balance, complementing its ‘constructive
engagement’ with real pressure, through public scrutiny of China’s human rights
record at the United Nations.”
The report
argues that the international clamp-down on terrorism which followed last
year’s 11 September atrocities has been used as a pretext to oppress the mainly
Muslim Uighur community in the province of Zinjiang.
And it berates
Beijing for having “by far the highest rate of executions in the world”, the
heavy-handed nature of its ‘Strike Hard’ anti-crime campaign, the alleged
arbitrary detention of Falun Gong meditation practitioners and the reportedly
systematic abuse of North Korean asylum seekers.
This article appeared in the 26 September 2002
issue of European Voice. ©2002 The Economist
Group
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