2007年VOA标准英语-Freedom House Warns of 'Global Stagnation'(在线收听) |
By Margaret Besheer
Freedom House's annual survey found that the percentage of countries designated as "free" has failed to increase since 1994. The report surveyed 193 countries, rating them on a variety of criteria. Ninety nations were judged to be "free," while 58 qualified as "partly free" and 45 were rated "not free." About one-half of the people in the world living in "not free" conditions live in China. Freedom House's director of research Arch Puddington says that during 2006 Asia suffered the most set backs. The most significant was the military coup in Thailand that ousted the country's democratically elected president. "But Thailand is not the only country that moved in a backward direction. East Timor had a ratings decline; the Philippines declined; Taiwan had a very modest decline because of the presidential level of corruption; Malaysia moved in the wrong direction; Fiji had a coup; the Solomon Islands also moved in the wrong direction because of bad elections," he said. Russia also fared poorly in the Freedom House report. Modest declines were noted for Moscow's crackdown on non-governmental organizations and for its support of regimes in Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan. Latin America, however, received some positive marks for elections last year in a dozen countries. But high rates of violent crime, corruption and economic instablity held the region back. The report found the most free nations to be the United States and in Western Europe, however, the United States was criticized for its counter-terrorism efforts, which have raised concerns about the protection of civil liberties. The report says the trend over the past decade is disturbing, with a lack of significant breakthroughs and the emergence of authoritarian regimes that are aggressively hostile to democracy. |
原文地址:http://www.tingroom.com/voastandard/2007/1/36682.html |