Procedural justice is a principle that has always been championed not
 just in judicial affairs but also in politics in the West. Yet in its 
attempt to block China's candidate from being elected the head of the 
World Intellectual Property Organization, the United Nations agency 
charged with protecting intellectual property and promoting innovation, 
the United States is obviously going against this principle.
A 
close-door vote by WIPO member states will be held on March 4 to 5 to 
decide who will replace Francis Gurry of Australia as WIPO's 
director-general. China's Wang Binying is one of the six candidates in 
the running, the other five are from Colombia, Ghana, Kazakhstan, Peru 
and Singapore. Having served as deputy chief of WIPO for a decade, Wang 
is obviously considered a strong candidate.
However, in an 
opinion piece published in The Financial Times, Peter Navarro who is an 
assistant to the US president and director of the US Office of Trade and
 Manufacturing Policy, wrote that "giving control of WIPO to a 
representative of China would be a terrible mistake".
Well-known 
to be a China hawk, he even alleged a Chinese "gambit to gain control 
over 15 specialized agencies of the UN", noting that China already has 
leadership of four of those, while no other country leads more than one.
The
 US even warned some of the medium and small countries not to vote for 
China or they will face consequences such as weakened relations with the
 US or losing access to World Bank and International Monetary Fund 
loans.
There is no reason for the US to politicize the normal 
selection of WIPO head, which will only do a disservice to the work of 
the organization. The UN is not an arena for a political fight but an 
international body where solutions can be sought to complicated 
international issues.
China has no ambition or strategy to seek 
dominance over the UN organizations. It has gained clout in the 
international community that is compatible with what it has done as a 
responsible major power.
There is a striking contrast between 
what China has done, in terms of aid to poor countries and contributions
 to world peace as well as to the fight against climate change, and the 
US unilateral slogan of "America first" and its withdrawal from 
international organizations and multilateral treaties.
China does
 need to catch up in terms of protection of intellectual property and it
 has been making unremitting efforts in that direction. Should its own 
representative head WIPO, it would only further promote its IPR 
protection endeavor.
What the US has done amounts to interference
 with the procedure of the WIPO selection of its new head. That it shows
 no compunction to proceed with what it is doing only verifies the fact 
that it is none other than a hegemon, which shows no respect for rules 
and justice.
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