Human Rights Watch

Human Rights Watch criticizes Biden, others for weak defense of democracy

Reuters

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Human Rights Watch criticizes Biden, others for weak defense of democracy

AMERICAN PRESIDENT. US President Joe Biden convenes a virtual summit with leaders from democratic nations at the State Department's Summit for Democracy, at the White House, in Washington, US December 9, 2021.

REUTERS/Leah Millis

Human Rights Watch executive director Kenneth Roth says that during key summits US President Joe Biden 'seemed to lose his voice when it came to public denunciation of serious human rights violations'

UNITED NATIONS – Human Rights Watch on Thursday, January 13, criticized US President Joe Biden and other Western leaders for a weak defense of democracy and for failing to meet challenges from the climate crisis and COVID-19 pandemic to poverty, inequality, and racial injustice.

In contrast to what Human Rights Watch executive director Kenneth Roth described as former US President Donald Trump’s “embrace of friendly autocrats,” Biden took office in January 2021 with a pledge to put human rights at the center of his foreign policy.

“But he continued to sell arms to Egypt, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, and Israel despite their persistent repression,” Roth wrote in Human Rights Watch’s annual World Report, released on Thursday.

“Other Western leaders displayed similar weakness in their defense of democracy,” Roth wrote, naming French President Emmanuel Macron and former German Chancellor Angela Merkel.

Roth also said that during key summits Biden “seemed to lose his voice when it came to public denunciation of serious human rights violations.”

“The US State Department has issued occasional protests about repression in certain countries, and in extreme cases the Biden administration introduced targeted sanctions on some officials responsible, but the influential voice of the president was often missing,” he wrote.

US officials have defended the Biden administration’s record, saying diplomats have frequently raised human rights concerns with foreign leaders, including in difficult talks with adversaries including China and Russia.

“If democracies are to prevail in the global contest with autocracy, their leaders must do more than spotlight the autocrats’ inevitable shortcomings. They need to make a stronger, positive case for democratic rule,” Roth said. – Rappler.com

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