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DPA (Deutsche Presse-Agentur, Germany): UN Rights Chief Engages China, As Group Sees "Little Progress" [Excerpt]

Nov. 9, 2001

BEIJING, Nov 8, 2001

(DPA) United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights Mary Robinson on Thursday said she raised with Chinese officials Beijing's [...] "widespread" use of torture.

"There are serious problems to address but there is a spirit of openness that I welcome very much in expressing those concerns," Robinson told reporters after signing a technical cooperation agreement with China.

"I think there is widespread use of torture in China ... It's for that reason that I am very keen that the (UN) special rapporteur against torture visits," she said.

Robinson also attended a workshop on human rights education in primary and secondary schools, the third workshop held this year under the agreement made when she visited China last November.

But New York-based Human Rights in China said there had been few signs of improvement since the UN and China began technical cooperation on human rights 12 months ago.

"Since the launch of the technical cooperation program, there has been poor progress on eliminating political imprisonment, administrative detention or torture," HRIC executive director Xiao Qiang said in a statement released on Thursday.

[...]

Robinson said she was also worried about how China and other countries might be abusing the need to take measures against terrorism.

[...]

Robinson said she would also raise with China individual cases of human rights violations [...].

On Friday she is scheduled to hold talks with Chinese President Jiang Zemin.

"I have raised individual cases and serious issues of concern on previous visits and I will do so on this occasion," she said.

But she admitted that she had "not had as much progress on individual cases as I have wished to".

Last month a European Union rights delegation said Beijing had "agreed in principle" to a visit by the UN special rapporteur on torture.

China had a "clear commitment" to curbing torture and had asked the EU to help in the "huge task" of educating officials and police, Spanish EU official Angelos Pangratis said.

http://www.europeaninternet.com/china/news.php3?id=777175oion=default