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  • U.S. State Department Releases 2004 Human Rights Country Reports

    Bureau of International Information Programs, U.S. Department of
    State. Web site: http://usinfo.state.gov
    Feb 28 2005


    U.S. State Department Releases 2004 Human Rights Country Reports

    Introduction says aim is to show needed tasks, potential for
    cooperation


    The U.S. Department of State released its annual Country Reports
    on Human Rights Practices on February 28. The 2004 reports, which
    provide individual analyses of the human rights situations in 196
    countries, are designed to assess human rights conditions worldwide.
    The reports, according to their introduction, demonstrate that the
    United States "has stepped forward with its democratic allies to
    reaffirm our commitment to human rights and democracy."

    Citing human rights in improvements in Afghanistan, Iraq and Ukraine
    - countries which have recently experienced national elections and
    increased citizen participation - the introduction says unhindered
    citizen participation in government creates "momentum for the
    improvement of human rights practices for all people participating
    in them."

    According to the reports, several countries -- including Burma, Iran,
    North Korea, Sudan and Venezuela -- continue to severely restrict
    fundamental human rights enshrined in the Universal Declaration
    of Human Rights, including freedom of speech, press, assembly,
    association, religion and movement.

    The purpose of the reports, however, is not simply to bring to light
    human rights achievements and violations but, rather, to "illuminate
    both future tasks and the potential for greater cooperation in
    advancing the aspirations of the Universal Declaration of Human
    Rights," the introduction says.

    The complete 2004 Country Reports on Human Rights Practices can be
    found at: http://www.state.gov/g/drl/rls/hrrpt/2004/index.htm

    Following is the text of the Introduction to the reports:

    (begin text)

    INTRODUCTION TO THE COUNTRY REPORTS ON HUMAN RIGHTS PRACTICES FOR 2004

    On September 17, 2002, President Bush presented a new National Security
    Strategy for the United States based on the principle that promoting
    political and economic freedom and respect for human dignity will build
    a safer and better world. To guide and focus the national effort that
    had grown out of the war on terrorism, the strategy outlined a series
    of fundamental tasks which, among others, required our Government
    to champion aspirations for human rights and build democracy. In
    his second inaugural address on January 20, 2005, President Bush
    elaborated on that principle: "The survival of liberty in our land
    depends on the success of liberty in other lands. The best hope for
    peace in our world is the expansion of freedom in all the world."

    The United States and its international partners worked with many
    countries during 2004 to expand freedom by helping to protect the
    political rights of their citizens and to advance the rule of law in
    their societies. In a few cases, where concerns centered on the rights
    of the people to choose their own governments, dramatic developments
    focused global attention on their struggles and landmark achievements.

    In the past three years since the removal of the Taliban regime,
    the people of Afghanistan have worked to diminish terrorism and
    improve security; to bridge traditional ethnic, religious, and tribal
    divides; to craft a new constitution faithful to their values and
    way of life; to extend fundamental rights to women and minorities;
    and to open their society to unprecedented political competition and
    freedom of expression. The international community responded to this
    undertaking by helping to register voters across a geographically
    scattered, largely illiterate population; by educating cadres of
    Afghan election workers and political participants in the conduct of
    elections and campaigns and by joining with Afghan forces to provide
    security during pre-election preparations and during the actual
    voting. In the presidential election, which took place in October,
    18 candidates vied for the votes of the 10 million registered Afghans,
    more than 40 percent of whom were women. Despite threats and attacks
    before the vote and serious technical challenges, more than 8 million
    Afghans--including more than 3.2 million women--cast ballots to
    chose their leader in a truly democratic election for the first time,
    with a majority selecting President Hamid Karzai.

    In Ukraine, the presidential election campaign was marred by government
    pressure on opposition candidates and by widespread violations and
    fraud during the voting. The Kuchma government engaged in fraud and
    manipulation during the presidential election in both the first and
    second round of voting on October 31 and November 21. The Government
    censored media outlets and journalists to influence news coverage,
    which sparked the so-called "journalist rebellion" among reporters
    who refused to follow government directives. Eventually, popular
    demonstrations against the official results of the flawed November
    21 vote gradually swelled into an "Orange Revolution," the campaign
    color associated with opposition leader Viktor Yushchenko, who was
    widely believed to have won the election.

    Respect for human rights in Ukraine took a decided turn for the
    better when, on December 3, the country's Supreme Court invalidated
    the runoff election as fraudulent, vindicating the observations of
    many domestic and international monitors about numerous violations
    of electoral procedures, harassment of opposition candidates, heavily
    biased coverage in government-controlled media, and widespread voting
    and counting fraud. In the court-mandated repeat election on December
    26, the people of Ukraine selected their new President. International
    observers of that vote, won by Yushchenko, noted the improvements
    in media coverage, increase in transparency of the voting process,
    decrease in government pressure to support a particular candidate,
    and fewer disruptions at the polls. The new President expressed a
    strong commitment to democracy, the rule of law, and observance of
    human rights.

    In Iraq, people faced a series of difficult tasks as they prepared
    to choose their own leader through democratic elections, while the
    severity and ubiquity of terrorist attacks expanded the dimensions of
    the challenges. First, the Iraqi Governing Council achieved consensus
    on a framework for the transition of sovereignty back to Iraqi
    authorities under the aegis of the rule of law and clearly defined
    procedures by which Iraq's citizens would be able to choose their own
    authorities and construct their own constitutional order. In March,
    the approval of the Transitional Administrative Law (TAL) achieved
    these objectives and paved the way for the second step, the transition
    of sovereignty from the Coalition Provisional Authority to the Iraqi
    Interim Government (IIG) on June 28.

    Working with the assistance of the United Nations and other
    international advisors, the IIG established the Independent Electoral
    Commission of Iraq, an independent election authority that established
    procedures for registration of and voting by Iraqis and expatriates in
    14 other countries. On August 15 - 18, the National Conference convened
    and elected a 100-member Interim National Council. Elections for the
    Transitional National Assembly, the country's legislative authority and
    the first step in the formation of an Iraqi Transitional Government,
    were scheduled to take place on January 30, 2005. According to the TAL,
    the transitional government will draft a permanent constitution that
    is to be ratified by August 2005, and new elections are to be held
    for a permanent government under that Constitution by December 2005.

    We believe events like these elections will increase the prospects for
    peace, provide a solid grounding for self-government in these countries
    and help create momentum for the improvement of human rights practices
    for all people participating in them. Yet progress along this path
    will not be easy or rapid, at least at first, as the 196 detailed
    reports in this volume amply demonstrate. In a number of cases,
    these reports will show that human rights practices may actually have
    eroded despite the successful completion of internationally accepted
    elections, as has occurred in some respects with the judiciary and
    the media since the voting that took place last year in Venezuela.

    It was in part the recognition of the complexity and difficulty
    of the task of promoting human rights that led Congress in 1977 to
    institutionalize the Department of State's process of compiling these
    annual Country Reports on Human Rights Practices. By providing this
    compendium of witness to the global human rights experience, we hope
    that the record of this work in progress will help illuminate both
    future tasks and the potential for greater cooperation in advancing
    the aspirations of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.

    The Year in Review: Democracy, Human Rights and Labor

    Behind the detail of 196 country reports contained in the pages that
    follow, the developments and experiences in certain countries stand
    out due not only to the intensity of the human rights problems but also
    to our involvement with the victims and their governments during 2004.

    The Government of Sudan's human rights record remained extremely
    poor as it continued to restrict freedom of speech, press, assembly,
    association, religion and movement. It arrested and harassed those
    who exercised these rights.

    At year's end, there were more than 1.5 million Internally Displaced
    Person (IDPs) in the Sudanese Province of Darfur, and another 200,000
    civilians had fled into Chad, where the U.N. High Commissioner
    for Refugees (UNHCR) coordinated a massive refugee relief effort.
    Approximately 70,000 people reportedly died as a result of the violence
    and forced displacement.

    Despite the Government's repeated commitments to refrain from
    further violence in Darfur, the atrocities continued. Government and
    government-supported militias known as the Jinjaweed routinely attacked
    civilian villages. Typically, the Jinjaweed, often in concert with
    regular government forces, conducted attacks under cover of military
    aerial support. In September, after carefully reviewing a detailed
    study conducted by independent experts covering the experience of more
    than 1,100 refugees, Secretary of State Colin Powell concluded that
    genocide had been committed against the people of Darfur, saying that
    "Genocide has been committed in Darfur and that the Government of
    Sudan and Jinjaweid bear responsibility and that genocide may still
    be occurring."

    Government forces in that region routinely killed, injured, and
    displaced civilians, and destroyed clinics and dwellings intentionally
    during offensive operations. There were confirmed reports that
    government-supported militia also intentionally attacked civilians,
    looted their possessions, and destroyed their villages.

    At the same time, year-end developments in negotiations related to
    the North-South conflict provided hope for peace and improvement of
    human rights practices in other areas of Sudan. By year's end, the
    State Department saw significant movement on the preliminary accords
    between the Government and the Sudan People's Liberation Movement
    Army after 21 years of low intensity conflict.

    In response to the Democratic People's Republic of Korea's (North
    Korea) continued brutal and repressive treatment of its people, the
    United States Congress enacted the North Korea Human Rights Act of
    2004. The Act seeks to address the serious human rights situation in
    North Korea and to promote durable solutions for North Korean refugees,
    transparency in provision of humanitarian assistance, a free flow of
    information, and a peaceful reunification on the Korean peninsula.

    In Belarus, police abuse and occasional torture of prisoners and
    detainees continued. The security forces arbitrarily arrested and
    detained citizens for political reasons; in addition, individuals
    were sued and sentenced to jail terms for such political crimes
    as "defamation" of state officials, often interpreted to include
    criticism of their policies. The Government of Belarus persisted
    in discounting credible reports regarding the role of government
    officials in the long-term disappearances of a journalist and
    well-known opposition political figures and failed to conduct full,
    transparent investigations into these disappearances. Instead,
    the Government appointed Viktor Sheiman, linked to disappearances
    by credible evidence in a Council of Europe report, as Head of the
    Presidential Administration, thus perpetuating a climate of abuse
    with impunity.

    In Burma, the Junta ruled by decree and was not bound by any
    constitutional provisions providing any fundamental rights. Security
    forces carry out extrajudicial killings. In addition, disappearances
    continued, and security forces raped, tortured, beat, and otherwise
    abused prisoners and detainees. Arbitrary arrests and incommunicado
    detention were frequent. Security forces also regularly infringed on
    citizens' privacy, forcibly relocated populations, and conscripted
    child soldiers.

    The Government of Iran was responsible for numerous killings during
    the year, including executions following trials that lacked due
    process. There were numerous reports that security forces tortured
    prisoners and detainees. Additionally, there were arbitrary arrests,
    extended incommunicado detention, poor and overcrowded prisons,
    lack of access to counsel, punishment by the lash, and violation of
    personal privacy.

    China's cooperation and progress on human rights during 2004 was
    disappointing. China failed to fulfill many of the commitments it
    made at the 2002 U.S.-China Human Rights Dialogue. However, at the
    end of the year, working level discussions on human rights, which had
    been suspended when the U.S. supported a resolution on China's human
    rights practices at the U.N. Commission on Human Rights (UNCHR),
    were resumed. During 2004, the government continued to arrest and
    detain activists, such as individuals discussing freely on the
    Internet, defense lawyers advocating on behalf of dissidents and
    the dispossessed, activists arguing for HIV/AIDs issues, journalists
    reporting on SARS, intellectuals expressing political views, persons
    attending house churches, and workers protesting for their rights.
    Abuses continued in Chinese prisons. The Government continued
    its crackdown against the Falun Gong spiritual movement, and tens
    of thousands of practitioners remained incarcerated in prisons,
    extrajudicial reeducation-through-labor camps, and psychiatric
    facilities. The National People's Congress amended the Constitution to
    include protection of human rights, yet it is unclear to what extent
    the Government plans to implement this amendment.

    In Saudi Arabia, there were positive developments in a few areas,
    including a government-sponsored conference on women's rights and
    obligations and the formation of the first formal human rights
    organization permitted in the Kingdom. In October, the Government
    issued an executive by-law entitling some long-term residents to apply
    for citizenship, and by year's end, voter and candidate registration,
    albeit only for men, was well advanced for municipal elections
    scheduled for February 2005.

    The record of human rights abuses and violations for Saudi Arabia,
    however, still far exceeds the advances. There were credible reports of
    torture and abuse of prisoners by security forces, arbitrary arrests,
    and incommunicado detentions. The religious police continued to
    intimidate, abuse, and detain citizens and foreigners. Most trials
    were closed, and defendants usually appeared before judges without
    legal counsel. Security forces arrested and detained reformers. The
    Government continued to restrict freedoms of speech and press,
    assembly, association and movement, and there were reports that the
    Government infringed on individuals' privacy rights. Violence and
    discrimination against women, violence against children, discrimination
    against ethnic and religious minorities, and strict limitations on
    worker rights continued.

    In contrast to developments in a number of countries that increased
    direct citizen control over government authorities, in Russia changes
    in parliamentary election laws and a shift to the appointment, instead
    of election, of regional governors further strengthened the power of
    the executive branch. Greater restrictions on the media, a compliant
    Duma (Parliament), shortcomings in recent national elections, law
    enforcement corruption, and political pressure on the judiciary also
    raised concerns about the erosion of government accountability.

    Racially motivated violence and discrimination increased, despite
    considerable legislative prohibitions. Authorities failed to
    investigate actions against minorities while subjecting them to
    more frequent document checks, targeting them for deportation from
    urban centers, and fining them in excess of permissible penalties or
    detaining them more frequently. Government institutions intended to
    protect human rights were relatively weak.

    The Government of Zimbabwe has conducted a concerted campaign of
    violence, repression, and intimidation. This campaign has been marked
    by disregard for human rights, the rule of law, and the welfare of
    Zimbabwe's citizens. Torture by various methods is used against
    political opponents and human rights advocates. War veterans,
    youth brigades, and police officers act with sustained brutality
    against political enemies. The Mugabe regime has also targeted other
    institutions of government, including the judiciary and police.
    Judges have been harassed into submission or resignation, replaced by
    Mugabe's cronies. The news media have been restricted and suppressed,
    with offending journalists arrested and beaten. Land seizures continue
    to be used as a tool for political and social oppression, and opponents
    of these destructive policies are subject to violent reprisals.

    Respect for human rights remained poor in Venezuela during 2004,
    despite the Government victory in an August referendum to recall
    President Chavez. Opponents charged that the process was fraudulent,
    but Organization of American States (OAS) and Carter Center
    observers found that the official results "reflected the will of the
    electorate." Throughout the year, the Government increased its control
    over the judicial system and its interference in the administration
    of justice. Nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) were subject to
    threats and intimidation by government supporters. In December, the
    legislature passed laws that erode freedom of the media, freedom of
    speech, and which in effect make criticism of the government a criminal
    offense. The U.S. Government sanctioned the Venezuelan Government for
    continuing to fall short in efforts to combat trafficking in persons.

    Fidel Castro added another year to his record as the longest
    serving dictator in the world. The Government retained its stance of
    rejection of all democratic processes and continued its harassment
    and intimidation of pro-democracy activists, dissidents, journalists
    and other professionals and workers seeking to undertake economic
    activities not controlled by the state. The majority of the 75
    dissidents sentenced to long jail terms in 2003 remained incarcerated
    despite international protests, and the authorities arrested 22
    additional human rights activists and sentenced them for acts such as
    "contempt for authority." Addressing abuses in Cuba continued to be
    a priority for the United States as a member of the UNCHR.

    During its 2004 session, the UNCHR formally adopted a U.S.-sponsored
    resolution on Cuba, as well as resolutions on Turkmenistan, North
    Korea and Belarus for the second year in a row. A resolution on Burma
    was approved by consensus. With such member countries as Zimbabwe,
    Cuba, Sudan, and China, which fail to protect their own citizens'
    rights, the 2004 session of the UNCHR fell short in several respects.
    The Commission failed to adopt resolutions on the human rights
    situations in China, Zimbabwe and Chechnya. The United States continued
    to emphasize the need to improve the functioning of the Commission,
    especially by supporting the inclusion of more countries with positive
    human rights records.

    The United States believes that democratically elected governments are
    more likely to respect their citizens' human rights. For this reason,
    the United States collaborated with other participating countries of
    the Community of Democracies (CD), a network of democratic countries
    working together to promote, solidify, and advance democracy throughout
    the world. In 2004, the U.S. joined other CD countries to help launch
    the formation of a democracy caucus, a group of like-minded countries
    that coordinates more closely in the UNCHR and other UN settings to
    advance goals consistent with democratic values. At the UNCHR, the
    United States - jointly with Peru, Romania and East Timor - introduced
    and succeeded in having adopted a resolution to enhance the UN's role
    in promoting democracy. Among the resolution's recommendations is a
    call for the establishment of a mechanism - a "Focal Point" - within
    the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights, dedicated to
    helping new and emerging democracies access UN resources available
    to support them.

    In addition to its support for the creation of the UN democracy caucus,
    the CD sought to support the development of democratic institutions
    and values through projects linking democratic countries. It sent a
    multinational delegation of democracy practitioners to East Timor to
    share best practices with Timorese officials. Likewise, a group of
    Iraqi, election-related officials traveled from Iraq to Lithuania
    to observe and learn about election processes. Unifying democratic
    voices against violations of basic human rights--rights that have
    been codified in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and that
    that were reaffirmed in the CD's Warsaw Declaration and Seoul Plan
    of Action--is an essential way to maintain pressure on governments
    that deny and violate the rights of their own citizens.

    Institutional changes:

    In Qatar, the process of constitutional change continued with
    the Emir's approval of the draft of a new constitution that voters
    overwhelmingly had approved in 2003. Although the Emir's family will
    maintain hereditary rule, the new constitution, expected to be enacted
    in June 2005, contains a number of human rights provisions.

    In Pakistan, President Musharraf continued as Chief of the Army Staff,
    despite his promise to step down by year's end.

    In Africa, the Central African Republic (CAR) enacted a new
    constitution and took a number of other steps to further an announced
    transition to democracy under President Bozize, who seized power in
    a March 2003 coup. In Guinea-Bissau, following a military coup in
    September 2003, the military installed a civilian government. In both
    cases, the stabilization of post-coup situations has been accompanied
    by a decline in the number of reported violations of human rights.

    Turkey's desire to meet the EU Copenhagen Criteria to begin the
    accession process moved the Government to pass an important package
    of reforms, including a new, relatively more liberal penal code and a
    set of constitutional amendments to combat honor killings and torture;
    expand the freedom of religion, expression, and association; and reduce
    the role of the military in government. However, implementation of
    these reforms lagged. Security forces continued to commit numerous
    abuses, including torture, beatings, and arbitrary arrest and
    detention, although observers noted a decrease in such practices and
    the European Committee for the Prevention of Torture reported that
    local authorities were making efforts to comply with the Government's
    "zero tolerance" policy on torture Honor killings continued. The
    Government relaxed some restrictions on the use of Kurdish and other
    languages, but restrictions on free speech and the press remained.

    The year witnessed increasing efforts by some governments to
    fight corruption. Costa Rica was the most ambitious in actually
    investigating former high-level officials, as it launched separate
    investigations for misuse of funds, kickbacks, and illegal contracts
    by three former presidents. In Africa, anti-corruption campaigns
    focused on pecuniary as well as human rights abuses by officials.
    Gambian President Jammeh's campaign centered on curbing official
    corruption to restore international credibility, and the work of
    the Commission of Inquiry led to the dismissal of a number of top
    officials and some prosecutions for economic crimes. Kenya created
    an anti-corruption czar, and the Government opened a number of
    investigations into allegations of extrajudicial killings. In Zambia,
    a Police Complaints Authority instituted in 2003 to combat police
    misconduct, continued investigations into complaints.

    Political rights:

    Regrettably, with the exception of Georgia and Ukraine, political
    developments in Eurasia continue to remain a serious concern.
    Progress continues to be measured largely in terms of civil society
    development. More and more NGOs, opposition parties, and citizens are
    willing to organize and advocate for government accountability. In
    Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan, opposition parties are unable to
    register. At the same time, governments of the regions are drawing the
    wrong lessons from Ukraine and Georgia and attempt to stifle civil
    society by harassing democracy NGOs through bureaucratic obstacles
    and specious legal means.

    In Georgia, the progress that international observers noted in last
    January's presidential election set the stage for "the most democratic
    elections in Georgia's history" in parliamentary voting in March.

    Other governments in the region have made some limited progress in
    improving electoral processes by drafting new election codes. New
    election laws introduced in Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan are
    an improvement in some areas, but in all three countries, the laws
    continue to fall short of international standards. Likewise, elections
    in 2004 in Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan marked limited improvements
    over previous ones, but domestic and international observers raised
    questions about voting irregularities, abuse or harassment of
    opposition candidates, or limitations on equal access to the media.

    In Belarus, the Government continued to deny the citizens the right
    to change their government through a democratic political process. A
    seriously flawed referendum on October 17 removed constitutional
    term limits on the presidency. In advance of the referendum and
    the equally flawed parliamentary elections held simultaneously,
    the Government suspended independent newspapers and disqualified
    many parliamentary candidates. The Government used excessive force
    and in some cases beat and arrested political leaders who peacefully
    protested electoral fraud and the journalists covering the protests.
    During the year, the Government also shut down a number of major
    registered NGOs that focused on political rights, and state security
    authorities increasingly harassed those that remained.

    In October, Bosnia and Herzegovina held its first self-administered
    municipal elections since the signing of the Dayton Peace Accords.
    The elections were judged to meet international democratic standards.

    A notably high voter turnout in a series of three elections in
    Indonesia paved the way for the transition in political power there
    from a defeated incumbent to an elected opposition leader. The process
    also marked the defeat of military and police candidates who stood
    for seats in Parliament.

    In noteworthy elections in Africa, the incumbent political parties
    of Ghana and Mozambique gained re-election in processes that were
    judged generally free and fair. Sierra Leone held its first local
    government elections in 32 years, although there were irregularities
    in some areas.

    In Burundi, concern focused on the delay in holding elections and the
    progress of the country's transition to democracy. The Transitional
    Government failed to hold the local and national elections that are
    stipulated by the Arusha Peace and Reconciliation Agreement, and
    at the end of the year it also delayed indefinitely a referendum on
    a draft constitution. The Maoist insurgency and the deadlock among
    Nepal's political parties also prevented the holding of elections
    there during the year and helped deepen the country's political crisis.

    In Rwanda, greatly circumscribed political rights were further
    limited when leading human rights organizations were either shut
    down or effectively dismantled. The action was justified as part of
    a campaign against "divisionism," according to a government report
    that accused human rights groups, journalists, teachers, and churches
    of promoting an "ideology of genocide."

    The Iranian Government's respect for the freedom and political
    participation of its citizens continued to deteriorate. Elections
    that were widely perceived as neither free nor fair were held for
    the 290-seat Majlis (Parliament) in February. The conservative,
    cleric-dominated Guardian Council excluded virtually all reformist
    candidates, including 85 incumbent members of parliament. Reasons cited
    included not showing "demonstrated obedience" to the current system of
    government. As a result of the seriously-flawed elections, reformers
    were reduced to a small minority of the parliament. Meanwhile, the
    conservative backlash against reformist trends and parties continues.

    Internal and other conflicts:

    The Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Sierra Leone completed
    public hearings in which approximately 10,000 citizens participated
    to air grievances as victims or provide confessions from the civil
    war. The Commission suggested legal, political and administrative
    reforms to the Government. The Government also released numerous
    children who had fought as child soldiers. By year's end, the UN
    Mission to Sierra Leone (UNAMSIL) had handed over responsibility
    countrywide to the Sierra Leone Armed Forces and the Sierra Leone
    Police, as UNAMSIL began preparations to withdraw by June 2005 as
    stipulated by its Security Council mandate.

    After being elected in a runoff at the end of 2003, Guatemalan
    President Oscar Berger "re-launched" the 1996 Peace Accords as a
    national agenda and symbolically apologized to citizens on behalf of
    the State for human rights violations committed during that country's
    protracted civil war. The Government also reduced the size of the
    military, eliminated some major commands and units and reduced the
    military budget. In August, the military made public a new doctrine,
    which includes provisions on the importance of protecting human rights.

    As a result of negotiations throughout the year, the Government
    of Colombia demobilized approximately 3,000 fighters from the
    paramilitary United Self-Defense Forces of Colombia (AUC in November
    and December). In addition, hundreds of municipal officials returned
    to their towns after the government established a permanent police
    presence in every urban center in the country. As a result, rates
    for homicides, kidnappings, and other violent crimes decreased.

    In Haiti, domestic conflict continued throughout the year. The
    political impasse, combined with increasing violence between pro-
    and anti-Aristide factions, culminated on February 29, when President
    Aristide submitted his resignation and left the country. Despite the
    presence of UN peacekeeping forces, the constitutionally-established
    Interim Government remained weak. In September, pro-Aristide
    partisans in Port-au-Prince launched a campaign of destabilization
    and violence known as "Operation Baghdad." This campaign included
    kidnapping, decapitation and burning of police officers and civilians,
    indiscriminate shootings, and the destruction and incineration
    of public and private property. The violence prevented the normal
    functioning of schools, public markets, the seaport, and the justice
    system in Port-au-Prince for several weeks.

    A series of conflicts continued to trouble South Asia. In Jammu and
    Kashmir and the northeastern states of India, violence continued,
    and security forces committed abuses with impunity, including killing
    both armed forces and civilians. In Sri Lanka, both the Government
    and the terrorist organization, Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam,
    violated the ceasefire. In Nepal, the disappearance of persons in
    custody remained a very serious problem, and government security
    forces continued to have broad authority to arrest and detain
    individuals suspected of sympathizing with the Maoist insurgents.
    Security forces also used arbitrary and unlawful lethal force. As
    the Maoist insurgency continued, rebel militants tortured civilians,
    while government agents forcibly conscripted children as soldiers
    and conducted bombings that killed civilians.

    The Great Lakes region of central Africa, which encompasses the
    Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), Rwanda, Burundi and Uganda,
    has been plagued by civil war, large-scale interethnic violence,
    and massive human rights abuses associated with them for well over
    a decade due to the continuing presence of armed groups and militia
    that move between the countries. These groups compete with one another
    for strategic and natural resources and inhabit an environment of
    shifting alliances. Among the most worrisome groups in the eastern
    Congo are those who took sanctuary in the region after the 1994 Rwandan
    genocide. This same group continues to oppose the Government of Rwanda
    and launch cross-border campaigns, as well as attack civilians in
    the DRC and commit numerous other abuses. There are also armed groups
    in the region who oppose the governments and peace process in Uganda
    and Burundi.

    While prospects for peace in the Great Lakes region are promising,
    human rights abuses are almost routine. Children are the primary
    victims and are forcefully recruited, abducted, and turned into
    soldiers, although some of the governments have made progress in
    demobilizing child soldiers in their ranks. Some militia groups are
    predominantly comprised of children. Women and girls are particularly
    vulnerable, as rape increasingly is used as a weapon of war. The
    region is a home to approximately five million of the world's 25
    million internally displaced persons and hosts a number of refugees.
    The United States is actively pursuing talks between the DRC,
    Uganda and Rwanda. We continue to monitor the situation in all the
    countries in the region by focusing attention on the threat posed by
    armed groups.

    In Cote d'Ivoire, an attack on the rebel positions and an air strike
    on French peacekeeping troops in November broke the tenuous 18-month
    ceasefire between the Government and rebels. Despite the embargo
    and threat of sanctions, the Government has threatened to pursue
    a military solution to the conflict. President Bush determined that
    Cote d'Ivoire, once one of the United States' largest trading partners
    in the region through the Africa Growth and Opportunity Act (AGOA),
    was ineligible for AGOA this year due to concerns about the security
    situation and the general decline in the rule of law that make it a
    hostile place for foreign investment.

    In Russia, the September attack on the Beslan school in North
    Osettia and the ongoing disappearances of civilians detained by
    security forces underscored the extent to which both sides in the
    expanding conflict in the North Caucasus continue to demonstrate
    little respect for basic human rights. There were credible reports of
    serious violations, including politically motivated disappearances
    and unlawful killings, by both the government and Chechen rebels.
    Individuals seeking accountability for these abuses also continued to
    be targeted, and Chechen rebels continued to attack Russian civilians,
    including a bombing of a Moscow subway.

    Integrity of the person:

    After years of controversy, the Chilean Supreme Court upheld an appeals
    court decision to lift the judicial immunity of former President
    Augusto Pinochet. On December 13, a prosecuting judge indicted Pinochet
    for crimes committed as part of "Operation Condor" during the 1970s.

    In Central African Republic as the process of transition to civilian
    rule continues, the government disbanded the Security Investigation
    Division, a military intelligence unit that was accused of committing
    numerous human rights abuses, including torture, rape and extortion,
    during 2003. In December 2003, President Bozize reconvened the
    permanent military tribunal after an eight-year suspension. The
    tribunal considered cases on a variety of alleged human rights abuses
    including extrajudicial killings, rape and armed robbery.

    North Korea remains one of the world's most repressive and brutal
    regimes. An estimated 150,000-200,000 persons are believed to be
    political prisoners in detention camps in remote areas, and defectors
    report that many prisoners have died from torture, starvation, disease,
    exposure, or a combination of causes. The regime also subjects citizens
    to rigid controls over many aspects of their lives.

    In Egypt, the 1981 Emergency Law, extended in February 2003 for an
    additional 3 years, restricted many basic rights. The security forces
    continued to mistreat and torture prisoners, which resulted in at least
    10 reported deaths in custody at police stations or prisons during the
    year. Arbitrary arrest and detention and prolonged pretrial detention
    remained serious problems. Dismal prison conditions persisted.

    Widespread use of torture by the Government of Syria resulted in
    at least 8 deaths during the year. Arbitrary arrest and detention,
    prolonged pre-trial detention without trial, fundamentally unfair
    trials in the security courts, and deteriorating prison conditions
    all persisted. Throughout the year, the security services conducted
    mass arrests of Kurds in Hassakeh province, Aleppo, Damascus,
    and other areas. On March 12, security forces in Qamishli, in the
    northeastern Hassakeh province, opened fire on a crowd at a soccer
    match after clashes between Arab and Kurdish fans erupted. In the
    days of rioting that followed, dozens were killed, as many as 2,000
    Kurds were detained, and nearly 300 Kurds remained in custody and were
    awaiting trial before the State Security Court and Military Court at
    year's end. The Government also continued to withhold information on
    the welfare and whereabouts of persons who have been held incommunicado
    for years.

    In Uzbekistan, torture was routine in prisons, pretrial facilities,
    and local police and security service precincts, and members of
    the security forces responsible for documented abuses were rarely
    punished. However, the government took some notable steps to address
    torture and establish police accountability. It created preliminary
    procedures within some divisions of the Ministry of Internal Affairs
    for investigating and disciplining officers for human rights abuses and
    allowed NGO access to its prisons and to train prison guards in human
    rights practices. The Government also cooperated with international
    forensic experts to take part in investigations of deaths in custody
    in which torture had been alleged.

    Freedom of the press:

    A conservative backlash to democratic demands in Iran extended into
    a number of areas beyond explicit questions of political rights. For
    example, the investigation into the 2003 death of a Canadian/Iranian
    photographer who suffered a brain hemorrhage after sustaining
    injuries while in an Iranian prison stagnated during 2004. The
    Government also gradually suppressed all independent domestic media
    outlets and arrested or intimidated their journalists into silence.
    In 2004 the last forum for free debate, weblogs, came under pressure
    when the government began arresting their creators and forced them
    to sign false confessions.

    The increase in government pressure and control of media in Russia
    continued to weaken freedom of expression and independence of the
    media there, as a trend of increasing control and harassment of the
    press was noted in a number of Eurasian countries, especially Belarus
    and some countries in Central Asia. The Russian approach centered
    on use of controlling ownership of broadcast media to limit access
    to information on sensitive issues, such as Chechnya. Government
    pressure also increased self-censorship of journalists.

    In Togo, after the Government undertook formal political consultations
    with the European Union, it adopted a new press code with mixed
    results. It eliminates prison sentences for most journalistic
    offenses, but maintained them for inciting certain actions, such
    as ethnic hatred or violation of the law, as well as for publishing
    under a false name. The law also sets standards of professionalism
    for journalists and requires independent newspapers to ensure that
    at least one third of their staff meet the Government's standards.

    While Algeria experienced its first contested democratic election in
    2004, leading to the reelection of President Bouteflika, the Government
    acted to increase restrictions on the media. The use of defamation
    laws and government harassment of the press significantly increased,
    leading to the imprisonment of several journalists for terms from
    two to 24 months, closure or suspension of two newspapers, and more
    self-censorship by the press.

    In Venezuela, international organizations and domestic journalists
    charged the government with encouraging a climate of hostility toward
    the media. Administrative acts, combined with a new law passed in
    December, created a climate of hostility toward the independent media
    with increasing threats of prosecution.

    Freedom of religion:

    These issues are discussed in depth in the Annual Report on
    International Religious Freedom, released in September 2004,
    while these Country Reports further highlight and update important
    developments.

    The International Religious Freedom Act requires that those countries
    that engage in particularly severe violations of religious freedom
    be designated as Countries of Particular Concern (CPC). In September
    2004, the Secretary of State re-designated Burma, China, Iran, North
    Korea, and Sudan as CPCs, and designated for the first time Eritrea,
    Saudi Arabia, and Vietnam.

    With the cessation of government-sponsored violations of religious
    freedom under Saddam Hussein, the Secretary acted to remove Iraq's CPC
    designation in June 2004. Since the liberation of Iraq by coalition
    forces, there have been no governmental impediments to religious
    freedom, and the Iraqi Transitional Administrative Law provides for
    "freedom of thought, conscience, and religious belief and practice."

    The Government of Saudi Arabia's actions in the area of religious
    freedom were disappointing. Throughout 2004, senior U.S. officials
    engaged Saudi authorities in an intense discussion of religious
    practices, and in September, the Secretary of State designated Saudi
    Arabia as a "Country of Particular Concern" under the International
    Religious Freedom Act for particularly severe violations of religious
    freedom. The Government rigidly mandates religious conformity.
    Non-Wahabi Sunni Muslims, as well as Shia and Sufi Muslims, face
    discrimination and sometimes severe restrictions on the practice
    of their faith. A number of leaders from these traditions have been
    arrested and imprisoned. The government prohibits public non-Muslim
    religious activities. Non-Muslim worshippers risk arrest, imprisonment,
    torture, or deportation for engaging in religious activities that
    attract official attention. There were frequent instances in which
    mosque preachers, whose salaries are paid by the government, used
    violent language against non-Sunni Muslims and other religions in
    their sermons.

    Vietnam continued to restrict freedom of religion and the operation
    of religious organizations other than those approved by the State.
    The Government failed to issue a nationwide decree banning forced
    renunciations of faith, did not end the physical abuse of religious
    believers, continued to hold a significant number of religious
    prisoners, and although it permitted the re-opening of some churches
    closed in the Central Highlands in 2001, it refused to allow
    the re-opening and registration of hundreds of others. However,
    following CPC designation, some improvements in religious freedom
    were evident. Some religious leaders expressed cautious optimism
    about a new Ordinance on Religion that the Government released in
    November, and in December, the Evangelical Church of Vietnam North
    (ECVN) held its first National Congress in 20 years and named a new,
    independent leadership board.

    Among the gains in freedom of religion covered by the Country Reports,
    the Jehovah's Witnesses in Armenia succeeded in October to register
    with the government after they had experienced a string of rejected
    applications. In Bosnia and Herzegovina, a new state-level law on
    religious freedom passed both houses of the legislature. The law
    provides comprehensive rights to religious communities and confers a
    legal status upon them they had not held previously. And in Georgia,
    there were fewer reports of violence against minority religious groups
    this year.

    Treatment of minorities, women and children:

    On December 30, the Department of State completed its Report on Global
    Anti-Semitism, July 1, 2003-December 15, 2004. Drawing extensively
    on material from our embassies, NGOs and accounts submitted for these
    Country Reports, this separate compendium was prepared in accordance
    with a separate legislative provision.

    In the Czech and Slovak Republics, discrimination against Roma
    persisted, although both governments made efforts to improve the
    situation through such measures as revising legal norms and recruiting
    Roma to serve as community liaisons with the police forces or as
    health assistants.

    In Croatia, the restitution of property to mostly Serb refugees has
    improved significantly, although local obstruction to the return of
    minority groups remained a problem. In Kosovo, acts of violence against
    the minority Kosovo Serb population and other non-Serb minorities took
    place during a series of riots over two days in March, demonstrating
    the continued tenuousness of minority rights there.

    In Thailand, the government's human rights record was marred by
    abuses committed by security forces against Muslim dissidents in the
    southern part of the country. On April 28, elements of the police
    and military killed more than 100 persons while repelling attacks by
    Muslim separatists in Yala, Pattani, and Narathiwat provinces. On
    October 25, 78 Muslim detainees being transported to an army camp
    died from asphyxiation after police and military forces stacked them
    into overcrowded truck beds.

    In Afghanistan and Iraq, women made unprecedented strides in exercising
    political rights by voting, holding public office and standing for
    election as candidates. In education and other areas as well, women
    made increasing strides in achieving basic rights. In Pakistan, special
    women's police stations with all female staff have been established
    in response to complaints of custodial abuse of women. Additionally,
    while honor killings continued in Pakistan, new legislation stiffened
    penalties for honor killings and criminal proceedings for the blasphemy
    laws and Hudood ordinances were changed to reduce abuses.

    In a number of countries, one of the most significant problems related
    to the abuse of women and children is the failure of the state to
    combat vigorously against conditions that engender the trafficking
    of women and children.

    In Burma, women and girls from villages were trafficked for
    prostitution at truck stops, fishing villages, border towns, mining and
    military camps. Burmese men, women and children are also trafficked
    to other countries. Government economic mismanagement and forced
    labor policies worsen the situation.

    In the United Arab Emirates (UAE), women and girls are used as
    prostitutes and domestic servants, and young boys are exploited as
    camel jockeys. A recent documentary on camel jockeys notes the very
    young age at which abuse often begins, the harsh conditions that may
    lead to serious injuries or death, and the malnutrition, physical and
    sexual abuse by employers. The Government has pledged and taken some
    measures of limited effectiveness against these practices.

    State promotion of tourism drives the predatory interests that promote
    sex tourism and sexual exploitation of underage girls for prostitution
    in Cuba.

    The booming oil sector in Equatorial Guinea contributes to making
    the country both a transit point and destination for trafficking of
    women for prostitution.

    The estimates of the number of Indians trafficked into forced labor
    and the sex trade runs into the millions, in addition to thousands of
    Nepalis and Bangladeshis trafficked to India for sexual servitude.
    Trafficking in persons in India is a significant problem, and some
    government officials participated in and facilitated the practice.
    While India continues to lack a national law enforcement response
    to its trafficking in persons problem, some progress has been noted
    in individual states and the central government recently expressed a
    commitment to establishing and implementing a national anti-trafficking
    policy.

    Violence and discrimination towards vulnerable groups continued
    to be a problem in Tanzania. In August, the semi-autonomous island
    of Zanzibar outlawed homosexuality and set severe penalties in its
    autonomous island territory. On mainland Tanzania, 4 million women
    and girls have undergone female genital mutilation (FGM), and despite
    a law partially outlawing the practice, police rarely enforced the
    law and the average age of the practice appeared to have decreased
    in an effort to avoid detection.

    Worker rights:

    In Iraq, the exercise of labor rights remained limited, largely due to
    violence, unemployment, and maladapted labor organizational structures
    and laws, although, with international assistance, some progress was
    underway at year's end. According to the Brussels-based International
    Confederation of Free Trade Unions (ICFTU), workers reported organizing
    unions in workplaces where they were forbidden under the laws of the
    former regime and revitalized union structures previously dominated
    by the Ba'ath party. The International Labor Organization (ILO)
    provided technical assistance to Iraq throughout the year to help
    bring its labor laws into line with international labor standards,
    rebuild the capacity of the Ministry of Labor and Social Affairs,
    establish emergency employment services, and put in place training
    and skills development programs.

    In April, a Commission of Inquiry appointed under Article 26 of the
    ILO Constitution visited Belarus to investigate a complaint that the
    Government was systematically violating its obligations under the
    ILO's fundamental Conventions on freedom of association and protection
    of the right to organize and bargain collectively, both of which it
    has ratified. The Commission's report, issued in October, concluded
    that the country's trade union movement was subject to significant
    government interference. The Commission recommended that the government
    take all necessary steps to register independent unions, amend laws
    and decrees restricting freedom of association, protect independent
    trade unionists from anti-union discrimination, and disseminate the
    Commission's conclusions and recommendations. It stated that most of
    these recommendations should be implemented by June 2005 at the latest.

    Under the leadership of President Bush the United States has stepped
    forward with its democratic allies to reaffirm our commitment to human
    rights and democracy. We rest upon the principle that nations governed
    by free people will be the cornerstone for the development of a world
    that is more peaceful for all. The execution of our democratic duty
    depends on the determination and passion of its promoters. Let the
    following Country Reports serve as an indicator of the progress made
    and as a guide for the challenges ahead.

    (end text)

    (Distributed by the Bureau of International Information Programs,
    U.S. Department of State. Web site: http://usinfo.state.gov)

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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