City
Epaper

Civil society organisations call for rights safeguards in EU-China investment deal

By ANI | Updated: May 5, 2021 07:45 IST

A coalition of 36 civil society organisations (CSOs) has launched a joint appeal to the European Institutions calling for the inclusion of enforceable human rights clauses in the EU-China Comprehensive Agreement on Investment (CAI).

Open in App

A coalition of 36 civil society organisations (CSOs) has launched a joint appeal to the European Institutions calling for the inclusion of enforceable human rights clauses in the EU-China Comprehensive Agreement on Investment (CAI).

In view of the upcoming Plenary session of the European Parliament, the CSOs in the letter expressed "grave concern" at the omission of a human rights clause from the discussion about the agreement and its final text, the World Uyghur Congress (WUC) said in a statement.

They state that the omission of rights clause "sends a signal that the European Union will push for closer cooperation [with China] regardless of the scale and severity of human rights abuses carried out by the Chinese Communist Party, even when Beijing is in direct and open violation of international treaties and continues to refuse to allow international monitoring of the human rights situation".

The letter is addressed to the likes of President of the European Commission, Ursula von der Leyen; President of the European Council, Charles Michel and members of the European Parliament.

"It is evident therefore the European Union has a Treaty obligation, as well as a moral duty, to stand by its founding principles of democracy, rules of law and the universality of human rights in its negotiations with the People's Republic of China. This is an obligation not only to the people suffering oppression and gross human rights violations but also to uphold the international rules-based order," the letter further said while alluding to growing evidence of forced labour in Tibet and Xinjiang.

They called upon the EU and its institutions to ensure China ratifies core Human Rights Conventions before entering into the Agreement, mainly the ICCPR, and core ILO Conventions.

"The agreement should also include a human rights clause. This should be introduced via a Trade and Sustainable Development Chapter that uses binding language and provides for effective enforcement mechanisms in case of violation, the creation of an EU Domestic Advisory Group and effective monitoring and complaint mechanisms on human rights that can been seized by the affected populations and NGOs defending human rights. This mechanism should contribute to ensure the agreement will be implemented in conformity with international human rights law," they said.

( With inputs from ANI )

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: European Central BankchinabeijingEuropean ParliamentCharles MichelBudget at parliamentParliament budget
Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalBeijing Rains: 44 Dead and 9 Missing Due to Torrential Rainfall in China

InternationalTsunami Alert Issued in Parts of China After 8.8-Magnitude Earthquake Strikes Off Russian Coast

National"Never Said Trump Was Lying, Didn't Mention China Even Once": Rahul Gandhi on PM Modi's Operation Sindoor Speech (Watch Video)

OpinionsAfter ‘Cloud Bomb’, ‘Water Bomb’ Now?

International‘This Might Hit You Hard’: NATO Chief Mark Rutte's Warning to India, China, and Brazil Over Russia Ties Amid Ukraine War

International Realted Stories

International"Why is he not pressing down on China with same intensity?" Foreign Affairs Expert as Trump threatens to raise tariffs on India over Russian oil

InternationalUN Human Rights Chief condemns starvation in Gaza as 'affront to our collective humanity'

InternationalFossils of unexplored marine lizards species from Jurassic era discovered in Germany

InternationalUSD 87 Million allocated for projects to reduce greenhouse emissions

InternationalTurkmenistan hosts UN conference on landlocked developing countries