t r u t h o u t | 03.13
http://www.truthout.org/031309M
Who Is
Wednesday 11 March 2009
by: Mark Weisbrot | Visit article original @ The Guardian
After Abu Ghraib, Gitmo and extraordinary renditions, other countries now challenge
The
It's a reasonable question, and the fact that more democratic governments are asking it may signal a tipping point. Clearly a state that is responsible for such high-profile torture and abuses as took place at Abu Ghraib and Guantanamo, that regularly killed civilians in Afghanistan and Iraq and that reserved for itself the right to kidnap people and send them to prisons in other countries to be tortured ("extraordinary rendition") has a credibility problem on human rights issues.
Although President Barack Obama has pledged to close down the prison at
In the past, Washington was able to position itself as an important judge of human rights practices despite being complicit or directly participating in some of the worst, large-scale human rights atrocities of the post-second world war era - in Vietnam, Indonesia, Central America and other places. This makes no sense from a strictly logical point of view, but it could persist primarily because the
Internally, the United States has had a relatively well-developed system of the rule of law, trial by jury, an independent judiciary and other constitutional guarantees (although these did not extend to African-Americans in most of the southern United States prior to the 1960s civil rights reforms).
The Bush administration's shredding of the constitution at home and overt support for human rights abuses abroad has fostered not only a change in image but perhaps the standards by which "the judge" will henceforth be judged.
One example may help illustrate the point:
The argument is that the abuse of people in other countries - including the more than one million people who have been killed as a result of America's illegal invasion and occupation of Iraq - must now be taken into account when evaluating the human rights record of the United States.
With this criterion included, a country such as
US-based human rights organisations will undoubtedly see the erosion of Washington's credibility on these issues as a loss - and understandably so, since the United States is still a powerful country, and they hope to use this power to pressure other countries on human rights issues. But they too should be careful to avoid the kind of politicisation that has earned notoriety for the state department's annual report - which clearly discriminates between allies and adversary countries in its evaluations.
The case of the recent Human Rights Watch report on
For example, the report alleges that the Venezuelan government discriminates against political opponents in the provision of government services. But as evidence for this charge it provides only one alleged incident involving one person, in programmes that serve many millions of Venezuelans. Human Rights Watch responded with a defence of its report, but the exchange of letters indicates that HRW would have been better off acknowledging the report's errors and prejudice, and taking corrective measures.
The report's statement that "Israel's military intervention in the Gaza Strip has been equipped to a large extent by US-supplied weapons, munitions and military equipment paid for with US taxpayers' money" undoubtedly didn't win friends in the US government. But this is the kind of independent advocacy that strengthens the international credibility of human rights groups, and it is badly needed.
-------
Mark Weisbrot is co-director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research, in Washington, DC.
Click to SUBSCRIBE -> http://truthout.org/subscribe.htm
No comments:
Post a Comment