Sure, but there's no asian Magna Carta, no asian Declaration of Independence, no asian "A Letter Concerning Toleration", no asian "Communist Manifesto", no asian "On Liberty", no asian "Wealth of Nations", no asian Emancipation Proclamation, no asian Suffragette movement. To the extent that the Chinese started out on a programme of implementing social justice and equality, it was the influence on them of a white guy named Karl Marx. Yes, they reinterpreted and produced their own version--but that idea spread to them from Europe. Democracy arose first in Greece, and then re-emerged in France and Britain. These ideas did not originate in Tokyo, Jakarta, or Kinshasa. "Déclaration des droits de l'homme et du citoyen" was not written in Dhaka, the French Revolution happened in Paris, not in Seoul. When you even speak about "right wing" and "left wing", you are talking about the seating arrangements in the French National Assembly, not the Alaouite court. When your refer to the concept of a "right", you are under the influence of a British guy named Locke.
Absolutely Europe gets credit for spreading ideas about freedom, rights, and justice to everyone else. To the extent up thread that you were going on about inequality, you were repeating white European ideas first advanced by Karl Marx and John Mills.
Certainly these are contagious ideas, that have spread out to, and been embraced by people everywhere. That was demonstrated quite successfully on a stretch of highway in Asia on February 22nd, 1986 in probably the greatest democratic triumph of the last century. But it's silly to dispute from where these ideas originated. They originated as one of the core traditions of European political thought.