Lorne Craner, assistant secretary of state
for human rights, democracy and labor, says the new State
Department report "Supporting Human Rights and Democracy:
The U.S. Record 2002-2003" shows how the U.S. government
is integrating policy with reporting on human rights.
In the introduction to the report, which was
released to the U.S. Congress and the public June 24, Craner
said, "In this volume, we detail our efforts in 92 countries,
taking care to include among them places of concern for ‘extra-judicial
killings, torture or other serious violations of human rights.'"
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here to view the entire report.
Following is the text of the introduction:
The advancement of human rights and democracy
has many dimensions. There is certainly a long history of
identifying those rights -- as we have recognized them in
our own political system and in actions the international
community has taken through such instruments as the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights. Creating international consensus
on what constitutes fundamental rights was a major step forward,
taken in the aftermath of the atrocities of World War II,
although we discovered that in practice many governments failed
to live up to their commitments, and in some cases, openly
flouted international human rights standards.
In this kind of environment, monitoring human
rights abuses and holding governments accountable for violations
is another indispensable part of protecting human rights.
For decades, non-governmental organizations have taken up
the challenge of collecting comprehensive data and giving
a voice to those whose testimony oppressive governments would
silence. Since 1977, the State Department has published the
annual Country Reports on Human Rights Practices, which enjoys
a hard-won status as an accurate and objective portrayal of
the human rights situation around the globe. It is an indispensable
tool in our efforts to advocate for the victims of human rights
abuses and to press upon foreign governments the need to take
positive steps to build free, democratic and stable societies.
Over a quarter-century of reporting on human
rights has helped shine a light on the worst abuses and kept
pressure on oppressive governments. In the past 10-15 years,
particularly with the fall of the Soviet Union, the United
States has taken opportunities to extend human rights promotion
beyond what is called the "name and shame" strategy.
This has required us to look at the human rights reports as
not merely a record of past performance, but a guide to areas
and methods for future improvement. More recently, President
Bush's U.S.-Middle East Partnership Initiative (MEPI) and
Millennium Challenge Account (MCA) proposals have increased
our reliance on human rights reporting for achieving objectives
of democratic governance. And so more and more, we are using
the annual Country Reports with these goals in mind, to help
us and others involved in policymaking tailor assistance programs
to achieve real and measurable impact.
Supporting Human Rights and Democracy: The
U.S. Record 2002-2003 identifies in a more systematic way,
for Congress, the American public and audiences overseas,
how the U.S. Government is integrating policy with reporting
on human rights. Around the world, in every region, the United
States is implementing programs, taking advantage of the information
and understanding of global human rights that we have built
up over the years by compiling the annual Country Reports.
In this volume, we detail our efforts in 92 countries, taking
care to include among them places of concern for "extra-judicial
killings, torture, or other serious violations of human rights,"
as Congress called for in the Foreign Relations Authorization
Act, Fiscal Year 2003.
These reports have been produced by the Bureau
of Democracy, Human Rights and Labor, but would not have been
possible without the contributions of regional and other functional
bureaus of the Department of State and U.S. missions abroad,
and those provided by the U.S. Departments of Justice and
Labor and the U.S. Agency for International Development. In
fact, the joint production of the report mirrors the collaborative
nature of our efforts to defend and promote democracy worldwide.