U.S. issues human rights report after delay
State Dept. didn't want it overshadowed by Iraqi abuses
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WASHINGTON - After weeks of international condemnation of American mistreatment of Iraqi prisoners, the State Department on Monday unveiled a report highlighting its worldwide efforts over the past year to promote democracy and human rights.
The report summarizes actions in 101 countries intended to advance press and religious freedom and to end trafficking in persons as well as torture.
“Advancing human rights and democracy around the world not only reflects our nation’s deepest values, it is profoundly within our interests,” Secretary of State Powell said in the preface to the report.
The report, entitled “Supporting Human Rights and Democracy, The U.S. Record 2003-2004,” was to have been released two weeks ago.
Delay explained
Lorne Craner, who heads the State Department’s human rights bureau, told reporters the release was delayed because of the furor over the prisoner abuse revelations.
“The message is what were doing around the world to promote human rights,” he said. “We decided it wasn’t the right environment to put that message out.”
Powell, delivering the commencement address Monday at Wake Forest University in Winston Salem, N.C., said prisoner abuse in Iraq was a recurring issue during meetings with foreign leaders at an international economic conference he attended over the weekend in Jordan.
“In their disappointment about America right now, I told them watch America, watch how we deal with this, watch how America will do the right thing,” Powell said. “Watch what a nation of values and character, a nation that believes in justice, does to right this kind of wrong.”
He promised “multiple investigations” to get to the bottom of the scandal.
U.S. efforts highlighted
The report shows what the administration has been doing in response to rights abuses outlined in the annual country-by-country report on the rights situation worldwide. The most recent edition of that study was issued in late February. Both reports are mandated by the Congress.
The new report describes a host of activities to promote protection of human rights and democratic development.
Craner cited Georgia as an example of a country where, with U.S. help, a democratic breakthrough occurred earlier this year.
A freely elected government took power in Georgia in January after a popular uprising forced the removal of the predecessor government, which had staged a fraudulent parliamentary election last fall.
The report is online at www.state.gov/g/drl/rls/shrd/2003.
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