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Global Human Rights Abuses Were Pervasive in 2020, US Concludes

Ken Bredemeier

   WASHINGTON - Human rights abuses abounded across the globe in 2020, the
   U.S. State Department concluded Tuesday in its annual review of how the
   world's governments treat their people.

   "The trend lines on human rights continue to move in the wrong
   direction," Secretary of State Antony Blinken told reporters.
   Secretary of State Antony Blinken speaks about the release of the "2020
   Country Reports on Human Rights Practices," at the State Department in
   Washington, March 30, 2021.

   Commenting on the report, Blinken also said the coronavirus pandemic
   led to "unique challenges" throughout the world, with some governments
   using "the crisis as a pretext to restrict rights and consolidate
   authoritarian rule."

   "Women and children faced heightened risk as the prevalence of
   gender-based and domestic violence increased due to lockdowns and the
   loss of traditional social protections," the top U.S. diplomat said
   about the country-by-country look at human rights.

   He said that "other marginalized populations," including older people,
   those with disabilities and the lesbian, gay and transgender
   communities "experienced particular vulnerability."

   The report, authorized by Congress to assess conditions in countries
   where the U.S. is sending foreign aid, did not analyze human rights
   conditions in the U.S., such as last year's street protests against
   police abuse of minorities or unfounded complaints by former President
   Donald Trump that voting irregularities led to his reelection loss to
   Democrat Joe Biden.

   Blinken said Biden's new administration "has placed human rights front
   and center in its foreign policy," while it recognizes "there is work
   to be done at home," as the country strives "to live up to our highest
   ideals and principles."

   "We all have work to do, and we must use every tool available to foster
   a more peaceful and just world."
   A protester from the Uyghur community living in Turkey, holds an
   anti-China placard during a protest in Istanbul, March 25, against the
   visit of China's FM Wang Yi to Turkey.

   But overseas, Blinken said, "too many people continued to suffer under
   brutal conditions in 2020."

   He cited numerous countries the U.S. considers offenders of basic human
   rights.

   "In China, government authorities committed genocide against Uyghurs,
   who are predominantly Muslim, and crimes against humanity, including
   imprisonment, torture, enforced sterilization, and persecution against
   Uyghurs and members of other religious and ethnic minority groups,"
   Blinken said.

   The report on China said Beijing "continued to imprison citizens for
   reasons related to politics and religion. Human rights organizations
   estimated tens of thousands of political prisoners remained
   incarcerated, most in prisons and some in administrative detention. The
   government did not grant international humanitarian organizations
   access to political prisoners."
   Protesters gather to mark the 10th anniversary of the start of the
   Syrian conflict, in opposition-held Idlib, Syria, March 15, 2021.

   Blinken contended that atrocities sanctioned by Syrian President Bashar
   al-Assad "continued unabated, and this year marks 10 years of their
   struggles to live in dignity and freedom."

   He said the war in Yemen "has driven millions to extreme humanitarian
   need, preventing them from exercising many of their basic rights."

   Blinken said the Russian government "has targeted political dissidents
   and peaceful protesters, while official corruption remained rampant."

   The U.S. diplomatic chief said that in Nicaragua, the "corrupt" regime
   of President Daniel Ortega "passed increasingly repressive laws that
   limit severely the ability of opposition political groups, civil
   society and independent media to operate."
   FILE - Riot police prepare to disperse protesters during a rally
   against Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega's government in Managua,
   Nicaragua, Feb. 25, 2020.

   The report said that in Nicaragua, "the government continued to hold
   106 political prisoners as of December, nine of them in solitary
   confinement. Political prisoners were kept together with common
   criminals."

   The State Department review said that "advocacy groups (working in
   Nicaragua) reported that prison authorities instigated quarrels between
   the general prison population and political prisoners by blaming
   political prisoners for any withheld privileges, often resulting in
   violence. Human rights organizations received several reports of
   political prisoners being beaten, threatened, held in solitary
   confinement for weeks, and suffering from poor ventilation and poisoned
   or contaminated food and water."
   A man arrested for protesting over human rights abuses makes a court
   appearance in leg irons in Harare, Zimbabwe, Sept, 14, 2020.

   Elsewhere, Blinken said that in Cuba, "government restrictions
   continued to suppress the freedoms of expression, association, religion
   or belief, and movement. State-sanctioned violence in Zimbabwe against
   civil society activists, labor leaders, and opposition members
   continued a culture of impunity," while gay and transgender people
   "continued to be vulnerable to violence, discrimination, and harassment
   due to criminalization and stigma associated with same-sex sexual
   conduct."

   In Turkmenistan, Blinken said, "Citizens criticizing the government
   faced possible arrest for treason, and the whereabouts of more than 100
   political prisoners remain unknown."

   He concluded that "these and other ongoing rights abuses cause untold
   damage well beyond the borders of any single country; unchecked human
   rights abuses anywhere can contribute to a sense of impunity
   everywhere."