GENEVA (AP) Faced with a U.N. review of its human rights, China acknowledged Tuesday that it still faces shortcomings but insists it has reduced poverty and has deepened judicial reforms and protections of ethnic minorities.
China put its pride and promise to better itself on display at the U.N.'s Human Rights Council, which reviews each nation's record once every four years.
Human rights groups and activists called attention to what they described as serious abuses and violations of international protections such as crackdowns on human rights defenders and tightened controls on ethnic Tibetan and Uighur populations in some provinces.
Tibetan activists managed to get past U.N. security and enter the grounds of the Palais des Nations, where the meeting is being held, and unfurl a banner denouncing China's rule in Tibet
A special envoy for China's foreign ministry, Wu Hailong, said in his speech to the three-hour session in the 47-nation Council that the nation has made many improvements but acknowledged the difficulties of a big, fast-growing country with more than 1.3 billion people and 56 ethnic groups.