China’s Policy on Corruption and Human Rights

In the recent milk scandal where hundreds of thousands of children were infected and a few died due to exposure to the industrial chemical melamine, China has again showcased its ability to enforce the law with a Communist flair. Announcing the conviction of several people who were found to have had a hand in the scandal, they were sentenced to the death penalty by firing squad, a practice that has long been abolished in the rest of the world. Human Rights activists deplore the said act that is brutal and unjustifiable as China is striving to cope with the change brought in by Globalization. Several other scandals have resulted in such executions which has silently drawn protests from many countries.
By saying silent, it means without much fanfare for China is the biggest market for consumer goods with billions of citizens and nobody wants to bite the hand that feeds it. Many more incidents of neglect for profit and others would be sure to surface as China has yet to adapt to a world where anybody can criticize or scrutinize anything imaginable (from outside the country that is).

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