Source: VOA
The U.S. State Department's
annual report on human rights world-wide issued Thursday cited an
upsurge in efforts to restrict access to the Internet and other new
communications means, and escalating persecution of vulnerable minorities. The
report was sharply critical of the rights performance of several countries
including
China,
North Korea and
Iran.

Basij militia attacking University of Tehran - June 2009
The massive two million-word report,
covering 194 countries, is mandated under a 1976 act of Congress and was
originally intended to guide U.S. lawmakers on foreign aid decisions.
But introducing the latest report, Secretary of
State Hillary Clinton said the document has become the most comprehensive record
available on the condition of human rights around the world.
"These reports are an essential tool for activists who courageously struggle to
protect rights in communities around the world, for journalists and scholars who
document rights violations and who report on the work of those who champion the
vulnerable, and for governments including our own, as they work to craft
strategies to encourage protection of human rights of more individuals in more
places," Clinton said.
Clinton said principles of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights are a
"North Star" (eds: guiding light) for the Obama administration's foreign and
human rights policies.
The report itself, covering events in 2009, levels harsh criticism at some
familiar sources of U.S. concern.
Assistant Secretary of State for Democracy, Human Rights and Labor Richard
Posner said the human rights situation in Iran worsened after disputed
presidential elections.
"In Iran, an already poor human rights situation rapidly deteriorated after the
June elections," Posner said. "At least 45 people were killed in clashes,
thousands were arrested, another thousand were arrested in demonstration in
December. It is a place where are continuing to see severe repression of dissent
and are continuing to pay great attention."

plainclothes security forces beat a protester in Tehran - June 2009
Iran was also cited for
discrimination against women and ethnic and religious minorities, with President
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad accused of fueling anti-semitism.
China was similarly faulted for increased repression of Tibetans and Muslim
Uighurs.
Citing the prosecution and jailing of prominent Chinese democracy advocates,
Assistant Secretary Posner said pressure on civil society groups challenging
Beijing government policies is on the rise.
"In the last several years, more public interest, human rights, environmental
lawyers have been taking cases, law clinics are springing up," Posner said.
"There seems to be a real crackdown, and there are also greater restrictions on
NGO's."
China was among some 25 countries said to have imposed restrictions on the
ability of non-governmental groups to register and operate, and among those
restricting the Internet and other new media.
Posner said the situation in neighboring North Korea was far more bleak.
"It's probably one of the most closed societies in the world. So across the
board, I would say conditions are poor, they're not getting better, and we
continue to be very mindful of the plight of the North Korean people living in
that circumstance," Posner said.
The report also took aim at media curbs in Russia and Venezuela.
Yet Posner noted positive human rights trends in a number of countries including
Georgia, Ukraine, Bhutan, the Maldives and Liberia, where the government has set
up a truth and reconciliation commission in the aftermath of years of civil
conflict.
While the U.S. human rights record is not assessed, the report noted that the
United States will submit to its first periodic review before the U.N. Human
Rights Council later this year.
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