
 
		Human rights Lucky Trump has reason to grin once more 
  
  
 Caribbean Life, Feb. 28-Mar. 5, 2020 11  
 Continued from Page 10  
 border. 
 It  also  means  using  the  authority  
 of  the  secretary-general’s  office  to  
 launch  investigations  and  fact-finding  
 missions  when  appropriate.  That  
 includes  launching  an  inquiry  into  
 China’s  massive  rights  violations  in  
 Xinjiang, and pressing for an international  
 accountability  mechanism  on  
 Sri Lanka. 
 The  secretary-general  should  order  
 a  follow-up  inquiry  into  the  murder  
 of  Washington  Post  columnist  Jamal  
 Khashoggi to help determine whether  
 Saudi  Arabia’s  top  leadership  ordered  
 his  slaying.  He  should  also  publicly  
 release the findings of his inquiry into  
 attacks on hospitals and other protected  
 facilities in Syria, likely carried out  
 by the Russian-Syrian alliance. 
 None  of  this  is  to  say  Guterres  
 should  abandon  “private  diplomacy”  
 with  governments.  But  he  should  
 re-emphasize  public  diplomacy  on  
 human  rights  at  the  UN.  Human  
 rights  advocacy  shouldn’t  be  the  sole  
 responsibility  of  High  Commissioner  
 for  Human  Rights  Michelle  Bachelet  
 and her office. 
 The secretary-general should be the  
 UN’s  leading  voice  on  human  rights,  
 not only working in the background. 
 Secretary-General  Guterres  has  
 issued  a  call  to  action  on  human  
 rights. Now it’s up to him to act. 
 Meanwhile,  Trump  has  claimed  
 victory and struck a less aggressive  
 tone on international trade conflicts,  
 declaring the end of hostilities with  
 China  in  January  after  concluding  
 the  US  Mexico  Canada  Agreement  
 (USMCA),  with  some  minor,  largely  
 cosmetic changes to the preceding  
 North American Free Trade Agreement  
 (NAFTA). 
 But he has also turned on Europe,  
 threatening  at  Davos  to  levy  huge  
 tariffs on European car imports. This  
 was followed by another threat from  
 Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin to  
 punish European countries that have  
 the audacity to tax American digital  
 firms. 
 The art of the ordeal 
 Trump Commerce Secretary Wilbur  
 Ross’s blatant schadenfreude over the  
 coronavirus  outbreak  that  it  could  
 boost US jobs is telling. The coronavirus  
 pandemic has shut down Chinese  
 businesses and ports as efforts to  
 contain the pandemic wreck China’s  
 manufacturing supply chains. 
 Under  the  US-China  Phase-One  
 trade deal, China will increase imports  
 of US farm goods by US$32 billion over  
 two years, enhancing his appeal to the  
 US rural farm vote. 
 So,  if anything goes wrong, Trump  
 can always blame China or the pandemic  
 for any shortfalls, while heroically  
 claiming to be protecting the US  
 from a new Chinese threat. Meanwhile,  
 Trump seems likely to ratchet up his  
 rhetoric against Europe’s farmers. 
 To mitigate the economic impacts  
 of the trade conflicts and the coronavirus  
 outbreak,  other  countries,  
 including China, are further easing  
 monetary  policy.  The  US  Fed  can  
 thus more easily remain dovish, at  
 least until November, ensuring more  
 buoyant  equity  markets,  and  helping  
 Trump’s re-election prospects. 
 The Donald has much reason to  
 grin again. 
 Continued from Page 10  
 U.S. President, Donald Trump reacts after taking his seat at the ‘Namaste  
 Trump’ event at Sardar Patel Stadium in Ahmedabad, India, Monday, Feb.  
 24, 2020.   Associated Press / Aijaz Rahi 
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
   
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