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BEIJING, May 18 (Xinhuanet) -- People around the world have been shocked in the past two months when they saw photographs of naked, hooded Iraqi prisoners being sexually humiliated by American soldiers, which have sparked anger worldwide, especially in the Arab world.
The scandal has not only severely undermined the
image of the United States, which often boasts itself as a "world leader," but
also exposed its "double standard" in dealing with freedom, democracy and human
rights issues.
WANTON ACTS UNDER MASK OF FREEDOM
Lynndie England, 21, is one of the seven US Army
reservists charged with inhumanely treating detainees at Abu Ghraib prison,
outside Baghdad.
In one photograph, the female private first class was
seen holding a leash attached to an Iraqi's neck and in another she wasshown
smiling with a cigarette dangling from her mouth as she gavethe thumbs-up to a
naked and hooded Iraqi man.
Other photos showed that Iraqi inmates were kept
naked, sprawling on top of each other, forced to wear hoods over their heads,
beaten by American jailers and photographed in humiliating poses.
Those who viewed the photos said the pictures were
disgusting and it was hard to believe that this was actually taking place in a
US-controlled facility.
The pictures outraged the world community and caused
an uproar in the United States. The US senate said in a resolution that it
"condemns in the strongest possible terms the despicable acts at Abu Ghraib
prison and joins with the president in expressing apology for the humiliation
suffered by the prisoners in Iraq and their families."
Last year, the US-led coalition forces toppled former
Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein by a military operation code-named "Iraqi Freedom."
However, Iraqis now might be more clearly aware of
the "double standard" of freedom flaunted by the United States: Americans are
born with freedom, but people in other countries could not enjoy as much freedom
as Americans; the United States can do whatever itwants in any part of the
world, while others have to pay for its unjust acts.
Sen. Edward Kennedy, a Massachusetts Democrat,
accused US President George W. Bush of presiding over "America's steepest
anddeepest fall from grace in the history of our country."
The United States has become "the most hated nation
in the world as a result of this disastrous policy in the prisons," he said.
US soldiers' mistreatment of Iraqi prisoners only
triggered more hatred and retaliatory acts. Mired in a rebellious Iraq, the
US-led coalition is doomed to face an increasingly tougher situation.
TYRANNY UNDER MASK OF DEMOCRACY
Without an effective legal system, democracy could be
easily hijacked by those who have vicious ambitions.
US soldiers in Iraq performed what is on the contrary
to democracy. The way they conducted interrogations not only humiliated the
Iraqi prisoners and their families, but also breached the Geneva Convention.
In the United States, suspects are allowed to require
the presence of lawyers during inquiry and nobody could be convicted unless a
series of legal procedures are completed, including courthearing, defense and
even the grand jury giving a verdict.
However, the Bush administration, which always
criticizes the "undemocratic" acts of this or that government, has made it
public that it would neither recognize the International Criminal Court nor
consider to ratify the protocols of the court.
One key principle of democracy is that everyone has
the right to express himself. However, the Iraqi people are deprived of sucha
right by the US government.
At a time when a number of governments expressed
their opposition to the Iraqi war and anti-war demonstrations rolled outacross
the world, the United States bypassed the United Nations and unilaterally ran
into war with Saddam Hussein's regime.
Looking into the prisoner abuse scandal and Bush's
Greater Middle East Initiative, how can Arab states not cast doubt on the
so-called democracy flaunted by the United States?
POWER POLITICS UNDER MASK OF HUMAN RIGHTS
People would never forget what has happened at Abu
Ghraib prison and what the United States has done to human rights.
Boasting itself as the guardian of freedom, democracy
and humanrights, the United States releases a report every year on human rights
practice of more than 100 countries worldwide, and wantonlylashes out at human
rights records in other countries, irrespective of differences in politics,
economy, history, cultureand social development.
Human rights violation by Saddam's regime was used by
the Bush administration as one of the justifications to invade Iraq. But the
prisoner abuse by US troops, a tip of the iceberg of human rights violation by
the United States, revealed the true face of the super power.
Although President Bush has argued the abuse was the
work of a handful of US soldiers, media reports have shown that the inhumaneacts
are rampant not only in Iraq, but also in Afghanistan and Guantanamo Bay.
According to Britain's Independent newspaper, the
US-led war inIraq has claimed 16,000 lives of the Iraqi people, among them
10,000 civilians.
Since the 1990s, the United States has resorted to
use of forcemore than 40 times worldwide, bringing tragedy to countless people.
In face of the abuse scandal, would the United States
continue boasting itself as the "human rights defender" or "human rights judge"?
-- Washington had better resolve its own human rights problems first. Enditem
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