High
time someone called out the US for its hypocrisy over human rights –
and that this should be reflected in mainstream media
Russia
condemns United States for human rights record
Russia
accused the United States on Monday of double standards on human
rights, criticizing its failure to close Guantanamo Bay prison and
its use of the death penalty while the U.S. Congress considers a law
which could punish Moscow for alleged abuses.
22
October, 2012
Russia
and the United States attempted to "reset" their relations
when President Barack Obama entered the White House in 2009, but ties
have turned decidedly cooler since Vladimir Putin declared last year
he planned to return to the presidency.
Republican
presidential candidate Mitt Romney has declared that Russia is
Washington's number one geopolitical foe, while Moscow has chafed
under recent U.S. allegations that it harbors human rights abusers.
Now
two weeks before the U.S. presidential election, the State Duma lower
parliament house held a three-hour hearing criticizing its former
Cold War foe.
"The
U.S. claim on the role of absolute leader in the sphere of human
rights is unsustainable and is not confirmed by practical realities,"
Itar-Tass quoted the Foreign Ministry's human rights envoy Konstantin
Dolgov as saying to lawmakers.
The
Duma hearing took the form of a presentation by the Foreign Ministry
recommending actions by the lawmakers.
Russia
also said the United States used human rights as a pretext for
meddling in the affairs of sovereign states around the world, in a
veiled jibe at Washington's handling of an uprising in Libya.
"(Russian
authorities) must defend against policies being carried out by the
United States directed at using the concept of rights as an
instrument of pressure and as a basis for intervention in the
internal affairs of sovereign governments," the Foreign Ministry
presentation read.
That
echoed a foreign policy decree Putin signed the day he was
inaugurated in May, which said Moscow would seek
closer ties with the United States but would not tolerate
interference in its affairs and would "counter attempts to use
human rights ... as an instrument of political pressure".
In
power since 2000, Putin has frequently accused the United States of
meddling in the affairs of Russia and other nations.
Congress
is considering a bill that would require the U.S. government to
impose sanctions on people believed responsible for the death of
Sergei Magnitsky, an anti-corruption lawyer who died in a Moscow jail
in 2009, and other human rights violators.
Romney
and some lawmakers have demanded the bill be adopted if the United
States upgrades trade relations with Moscow, after Russia joined the
World Trade Organization in August.
In
a sign of deteriorating ties earlier this month, Russia said it would
not renew a decades-old agreement with Washington aimed at
dismantling nuclear and chemical weapons. Washington said the two
sides were still talking over its extension.
Russia
has accused the United States of trying to sway Russian elections and
meddle in its domestic affairs through its U.S. Agency for
International Development (USAID), and it ordered the agency's
Russian operations shut down this month.
Kremlin
critics said the move was intended to cut funding to organizations
Putin sees as a threat following his return as president after four
years as prime minister, and called it part of a crackdown on
dissent.

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