Human Rights Watch urged world powers to support the rights of Arab Spring protesters to build real democracies after they ousted long-time strongmen once backed by the West,in its annual report today.
8220;Many democracies have allowed their ties with repressive allies to temper their support for human rights in the Arab Spring protests,8221; HRW said in its report,launched in Cairo just three days before the anniversary of the revolt that toppled president Hosni Mubarak.
8220;Time to abandon the autocrats and embrace rights,8221; says executive director Kenneth Roth.
8220;The people driving the Arab Spring deserve strong international support to realise their rights and to build genuine democracies. Loyalty to autocratic friends shouldn8217;t stand in the way of siding with democratic reformers.8221;
The 676-page report reviews human rights practices around the globe,with summaries of conditions in more than 90 countries and territories based on probes carried out by HRW staff from 2011.
Last year,the Arab Spring toppled strongmen in Tunisia,Egypt and Libya and paved the way for the removal of Yemen8217;s president,while pro-democracy protests in Syria continue to meet with a deadly regime crackdown.
Those events that captured the world8217;s attention are at the core of the report which also documents rights abuses in countries such as Afghanistan,Eritrea,China,Iran,Indonesia,Saudi Arabia and Pakistan.
The report also underscores a positive development in 2011 with the adoption of International Labour Organisation Convention 189 to protect the rights of domestic workers,a vast majority of whom are women and girls,against abuse. 8220;The convention did not topple any dictators but it radically changes how domestic workers 8230; and their work inside the home are valued,recognised and protected,8221; the report says.
But it is the Arab Spring and the international response to it that is the focus of the report,with Roth saying 8220;the West is still adjusting to this historic transformation.8221;
For HRW,8221;Western policy towards Arab countries traditionally has been one of containment,backing an array of Arab autocrats to guarantee 8216;stability8217; in the region even as democracy spread in other parts of the world.8221;
The New York-based watchdog says the 8220;reasons so many democratic governments make an 8216;Arab exception8217; include fear of political Islam and terrorism,the need to keep oil supplies flowing and a longstanding policy of reliance on autocracies to maintain Arab Israeli peace and to help stifle migration to Europe.8221;