Foreign Ministry spokesman Qin Gang (Photo: fmprc.gov.cn) Photo Gallery>>>
BEIJING, June 3 (Xinhua) -- China doesn't improve its human rights in response to the presumed will of any country, nor because of any certain activity to be held, Foreign Ministry spokesman Qin Gang told reporters here on Tuesday.
He was responding to a question about whether U.S.
President George Bush's attendance at the opening ceremony of the Beijing
Olympics would make China concede on human rights issues.
"We have been committed to improving human rights not
on the premise of the will of any nation, group, organization or individual, nor
because of a certain activity to be held that makes us concede to the human
rights issue," the spokesman said.
Qin noted that the government has managed to ensure
and improve the human rights of its citizens and made remarkable achievements in
this field. China will firmly push forward the human rights cause, he added.
He stressed that China advocates that human rights
dialogues should be based on equality and mutual respect, and China opposes
pressuring and taking double standards to interfere in other countries' internal
affairs.
Qin mentioned the 14th human rights dialogue between
China and the United States held here from May 24 to 28, saying it was
"positive" and "constructive."
He said the dialogue, touching on freedom of speech
and other human rights issues, would be helpful for future discussions and
conducive to the healthy and stable development of Sino-U.S. relations.
BEIJING, June 2 (Xinhua) -- The criticism by the U.S. Department
of State on China's democracy and human rights situation in a recent report is
"unreasonable," Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Qin Gang said here on Monday.
He made the remark when asked about the "2008 Country
Reports on Advancing Freedom and Democracy" released on May 27. Full story
BEIJING, May 28 (Xinhua) -- China and the United States
have restarted the human rights dialogue after years' suspension.
The 14th China-U.S. human rights dialogue was held in
Beijing from May 24 to 28, the first such dialogue between the two countries
since 2002, according to the Chinese Foreign Ministry. Full story