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Human
Rights ... ...
The Chinese government sets a high value on the World Human Rights
Declaration, considering it to be the first international document
which has put forward concrete specifications regarding respect
for and protection of basic human rights in a systematic way, and
forms a basis for practice in the field of international human rights.
In addition, the Chinese government believes that while striving
to realize the principle of universality of human rights, it is
also necessary to take account of the concrete conditions of each
country. As different countries adopt different social systems,
with different economic development levels, different histories,
cultures and traditions, they have different opinions on human rights,
and should take different paths to realizing human rights.
Out of consideration of its own history and national conditions,
and in accordance with its long-standing practice, China has formed
its own viewpoints on the issue of human rights, and has worked
out corresponding laws and policies. China's human rights have three
remarkable characteristics: First, extensiveness. All the Chinese
people enjoy human rights, rather than a small number of people,
or a part of the people of some classes and strata. In addition,
the sphere of human rights enjoyed by Chinese citizens is extensive,
including not only rights to subsistence, personal rights and political
rights, but also economic, cultural and social rights. The state
attaches great importance to guaranteeing personal rights, as well
as to safeguarding collective human rights. Second, fairness. All
Chinese citizens are equal before the law. All rights enjoyed by
citizens as prescribed by the Constitution and the law shall not
be restricted by money, property status, ethnic status, race, sex,
occupation, family background, religious belief, education, or length
of residence. Third, authenticity. The state guarantees the realization
of human rights in terms of systems, law and materials. The rights
enjoyed by the people in reality are identified with the citizens*
rights prescribed by the Constitution and laws, hence winning support
from all ethnic groups, people of all strata, all political parties,
all social organizations and all social circles in China.
To a country and a nation, human rights firstly mean the people's
rights to subsistence; and development is the basis for promoting
and protecting human rights. Since the founding of the PRC, the
Chinese government has always taken it as the most important and
most urgent task to make people have enough to eat and wear, and
has made unremitting efforts in this regard. Since 1979, China has
adopted the policy of reform and opening to the outside world, with
economic construction as the core, thus greatly promoting the development
of the social productive forces. By the end of the 1980s, China
had basically solved the issue of making the people have enough
to eat and wear, thus basically solving the problem concerning the
people's rights to subsistence. Now China, full of confidence, is
promoting reform and opening to the outside world in an all-round
way, developing the national economy and helping people live better-off
lives.
China participates in international human rights activities with
an active attitude, having signed, approved and joined nearly 20
international human rights conventions, including the International
Convention on Economic, Rocial and Cultural Rights, and the International
Convention on Citizens Rights and Political Rights. The Chinese
government has earnestly performed its duties as prescribed by these
conventions through domestic legislation, and judicial and administrative
measures, and submits reports on the implementation of the rules
of these conventions to the supervisory and executive organs of
the conventions regularly.
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