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03/12/10
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US Accused of Human Rights Violations
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Source: VOA
While the United States releases its
report on
human-rights violations in other countries, some international rights advocates
say the U.S. needs to improve its own record.
The new State Department Human Rights Report details rights violations around
the world. In Iran, for example, the report notes examples of people being
arrested without charge and tortured while in custody.
But some human-rights advocates accuse the United States of similar abuses on
suspects detained in the war on terror.
Amnesty International Advocacy Director T.
Kumar says the mistreatment of detainees held at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba could open
the door to greater abuses.
"The minute [the] U.S. is comfortable doing it to non-us citizens,
water-boarding or other types of torture, or keeping them in detention without
trial for a long, long time, it is almost seven, eight years now, and trials
also [are] not fair, it will not take long before they apply it to their own
citizens," said Kumar.
The administration of U.S. President Barack Obama announced plans last year to
investigate accusations that intelligence agents were using these aggressive
interrogation techniques under former president George W. Bush.
Former Vice President Dick Cheney has been a staunch defender of the Bush
administration's intelligence policies. In August, on the television program Fox
News Sunday, Cheney said the interrogation tactics were an essential tool in the
war on terror:
"Those interrogations were involved in the arrest of nearly all the al-Qaida
members that we were able to bring to justice," he said. "I think they were
directly responsible for the fact that for eight years, we had no further mass
casualty attacks against the United States."
Another point of concern for Amnesty International is America's use of the death
penalty. Kumar says the United States is the only Western country that still
executes people.
"No one should be allowed to take life of another human being - that is the
foundation of why we oppose death penalty," he said. "Even the people who are
horrible people, mass rapists, mass killers, we still stand by them saying no
one has right to take life from [an] individual."
But Michael Paranzino of the pro-death penalty group Throw Away the Key says
executing murderers is about providing closure for the families of victims.
"That is where I think this debate has to be focused, the lasting harm to entire
families when people are murdered," said Paranzino.
Amnesty is also critical of the state of health care in the United States. Kumar
says health care is one of the basic rights available in other countries that
should be available to all Americans.
"I will say U.S. is not up to par with other Western nations, but when you
compare U.S. to other countries, like China, obviously the U.S. is far ahead,"
he said.
Congress has been debating health-care reform for months. While few would argue
the need for basic health care, many conservative lawmakers argue recent
proposals would cost too much.
This is Republican Senator Lamar Alexander at a recent health-care summit.
"Our country is too big, too complicated, too decentralized for Washington, a
few of us here to just write a few rules about remaking 17 percent of the
economy all at once," he said.
While the United States is not reviewed in the State Department's annual country
report, its domestic-rights situation will come under scrutiny this fall at the
United Nations Human Rights Council.
Related Article: US
Human Rights Report Hits Conditions in Iran, China, North Korea
... Payvand News - 03/12/10 ... --
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