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BEIJING, March 1 (Xinhuanet) -- Following is the full
text of the Human Rights Record of the United States in 2003, released by the
Information office of China's State Council Monday. กก
The Human Rights Record of the United States in 2003
By the Information
Office of the State Council of the People's Republic of China
March 1, 2004
On February 25, 2004, the State Department of the
United Statesreleased its Country Reports on Human Rights Practices for 2003
(called the "reports" thereafter). As in previous years, the UnitedStates once
again acted as "the world human rights police" by distorting and censuring in
the "reports" the human rights situations in more than 190 countries and regions
across the world,including China. And just as usual, the United States once
again "omitted" its own long-standing malpractice and problems of human rights
in the "reports". Therefore, we have to, as before, help the United States keep
its human rights record.
I. On Life, Freedom and Personal Safety
The United States has long been in a violent,
crime-ridden society with a severe infringement of the people's rights by law
enforcement departments and with a lack of guarantee for the life of people,
their freedom and personal safety.
The United States is a country plagued most seriously
by violence and crimes. According to the statistical figures released in June
2003 by the US Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), a total of 11.9 million
criminal cases were reported in 2002 in the United States, including homicides,
rapes, robbery and theft. Of these cases, 19,940 cases were reported in Detroit,
where 2,073 people committed crimes in every 100,000 people. In Baltimore, where
2,055 people committed crimes in every 100,000 people. With regard to personal
offenses, cases of murders and rapes rose by 0.8 percent, and 4.0 percent,
respectively, over 2002(see The Sun, USA on June 18, 2003).
On Sept. 15, 2003, US Surgeon General Richard Carmona
admitted at a workshop that the United States has always ranked first in the
world in terms of homicide incidence. In August 2003, the US Department of
Justice acknowledged in a report that a total of 15,586 homicide cases occurred
around the country in 2000, as against 15,980 in 2001, and 16,110 in 2002,
indicating a rising trend yearby year (see the edition of USA Today on Aug. 25,
2003).
In a report released by the FBI in December 2003, the
FBI said the overall incidence of offenses in the U.S. somewhat dropped, whereas
the number of people murdered across the country grew by 1.1 percent during the
first half of 2003 (see the edition of USA Today published on Dec. 16, 2003).
From January to August of 2003, 166 homicides were
reported in Washington D.C., up 5.1 percent year on year. In Chicago, which
isknown as America's "homicide capital", there were 648 homicides in2002,
compared with 599 in 2003, or an average of 22.2 people victimized in every
100,000 residents (AP dispatch from Chicago onJan. 1, 2004). In New York, the
number of people murdered in 2003 amounted to 596 (AP dispatch from Chicago on
Jan. 2, 2004)). In California, the number of murder cases for 2002 went up 11
percent.The US Justice Policy Institute held that the existing legal system
could not ensure the safety and health of community residents.
The United States ranked first in private ownership of guns, resulting in drastic rise in gun-related crimes. According to a survey of crime victims, 350,000 criminal cases involving the use of guns were reported in the United States in 2002, and guns were used in 63 percent of the 15,980 killings in 2001. On Aug. 27, 2003, a jobless man carrying a gun broke into a car part supplyingcompany, killing seven of his former colleagues. Statistical figures from US National Center for Health Statistics showed that 56.5 percent of Americans who committed suicides in 2000 with the use of guns, involving 16,586 people (see Gun Violence, Related Facts. www.jointogether.org). (more)
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