Sunday, October 18, 2009

China's Civilized Economy - Human Rights?

From the outset I would like to point out that the term does not included here, China is Hong Kong and Macau.

Resulting planed economic reforms in 1978 by a Soviet-style centralized economy to a market economy that China's economy is on the spiral upwards. In the early 1990s China's economic boom through foreign direct investment, trade and other integrations such as privatization is conducted.

Today, almost every day we hear about China's growingEconomy, surprisingly, in the last two decades, China's fastest growing economy in the world.The economy of the People's Republic of China is the fourth largest in the world when measured by nominal GDP. The economic performance for 2006 was $ 2.68 trillion USD. With a per capita GDP in 2006, about 2,000 U.S. dollars and is growing fast everyday. And it is world trade over $ 1.758 trillion in late 2006.

Resultant of the above very practical economic realities, we can assume that China'sEconomy is more and more civilized. However, the "human rights" issues are still very uncivilized, I venture to China's human rights / civil rights always say never grow up.

According to various credible sources, the human rights situation in China and the violation of civil rights or human rights violations everywhere and systematic.Human in the People's Republic of China (PRC remain) the systematic and widespread. The Chinese government continues to suppress dissent and maintainpolitical control over the legal system, resulting in an arbitrary and sometimes abusive judicial regime. The lack of accountability of the government and the Communist Party (CCP) means that abuses go unchecked by civil servants often. This information sheet lists the most common types of abuses, including arbitrary detention, torture and mistreatment of prisoners, the severe restrictions of freedom of expression and association and violations specific to women.

Until today, the freedom ofFreedom of expression and freedom of expression, freedom of press, freedom of religion, the rights of minorities and other democracy-oriented freedoms are still restricted in a systematic and ubiquitous. Despite this modern age and its commendable economic growth, Chinese government still embraces his savage natures: capital punishment, organ harvesting and execution, racial and political discrimination and systematic human rights and civil rights abuses.

Now comes the timeChina must balance its economic growth of their human rights and civil rights issues. No matter how strong will the economy, Chinese government is still barbarians, so long as the human rights of the human and civil rights are being violated is still pervasive and systematic.



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