Sara Hossain, the head of UN’s fact-finding mission on Iran delivering remarks the 55th regular session of the Human Rights Council in Geneva on March 18, 2024
UN’s rapporteur on Iran’s human rights and its fact-finding mission have renewed their call to hold Tehran accountable for its violations, including brutal crackdown on dissent and surging executions.
The Human Rights Council hosted members of the UN's fact-finding mission that was established to investigate Iran’s crackdown on the popular protests of 2022, ignited by the death in custody of 22-year-old Mahsa Amini, arrested for allegedly violating the Islamic dress code.
Her death unleashed months of mass protests across Iran, marking the biggest challenge to Iran's clerical leaders in decades. The mission released an initial report last week, stating that the regime’s crackdown on protests amounts to “crimes against humanity.”
"Our investigation established that her death was unlawful and caused by physical violence in the custody of state authorities," said Sara Hossain, the chairperson of the mission told the Council in Geneva on Monday.
A woman holds a placard with pictures of, as Iranian call them, martyrs, during a rally of Iranian diaspora in Europe, on the eve of the first anniversary of the death of Mahsa Amini, which prompted protests across their country, in Brussels, Belgium September 15, 2023.
She said the protests that followed were marked by "egregious human rights violations", including extra-judicial executions, arbitrary arrests, torture and ill-treatment, as well as rape and sexual violence. "These acts were conducted in the context of a widespread and systematic attack against women and girls, and other persons expressing support for human rights."
"Some of these serious violations of human rights thus rose to the level of crimes against humanity," she emphasized, adding that since the protests women and girls in Iran were confronted daily by discrimination "affecting virtually all aspects of their private and public lives".
"It is hard to fathom that in the 21st century, women's access to the most basic service and opportunities, such as schools, universities, hospitals, and courts, or to opportunities for employment in government or other sectors, should be subjected to a wholly arbitrary requirement of wearing the mandatory hijab," she said.
The UN's Iran rapporteur, Javaid Rehman was first to address the 55th regular session of the Human Rights Council in Geneva on Monday, warning of the "deeply concerning" impunity for serious human rights violations in the country.
He expressed concern about the high number of executions in Iran, pointing out that the number of hangings increased 43 percent in 2023 in comparison to a year earlier to over 800. Rehman underlined that many of the executions follow trials that do not meet fair trial standards, particularly highlighting the death sentences related to the 2022 protests.
The rapporteur also decried the regime’s treatment of women who defy the mandatory hijab laws, expressing concerns about the deprivation of their basic rights as a punishment. Iran has intensified punitive measures to enforce its strict hijab laws such as banning defiers from public services and grounding their cars.
Rehman also highlighted the situation of ethnic and religious minorities, who are disproportionately affected by the death penalty, particularly for drug-related or security offenses. He particularly expressed concern about the harassment, intimidation, targeting, arrest, and detention of human rights defenders, lawyers, journalists, and trade union activists, as numbers soared since the 2022 uprising. At least79 journalists alone were arrested in the year after the protests sparked by the death in morality police custody of Mahsa Amini.
He emphasized that his mandate has been a platform to highlight and report on violations committed by state authorities and a voice for the millions of Iranians who are victims of the abuses. He called on the member states for the extension of his mandate for another year.
Rehman has been the UN Special Rapporteur on Iran for six years and the UN Human Rights Council is set to vote on the extension in the coming days. The Iranian government has refused to allow Rehman – or any other UN human rights rapporteurs -- to visit Iran since 1992.
After Rehman, the representative of the Iranian government dismissed his report as biased and politically motivated. Tehran’s deputy ambassador to the United Nations, Zahra Ershadi, reiterated that the country does not recognize Rehman’s mandate and repeated the regime’s propaganda.
Despite mountains of evidence, Iran claims that the human rights conditions in the country is ameliorating and rejects any report that portrays the country’s grim situation. A dominant tool for justification is shifting the spotlight to the situation in Gaza, with Ershadi accusing the West of not taking any serious action on Israel’s killing of civilians in Gaza. The war in Gaza started after Iran-backed Islamist group Hamas invaded Israel and killed 1,200 mostly civilians and took over 250 hostages.
Following Iran's representative, member states took turns delivering brief remarks. With the exception of Iran's allies such as Russia, North Korea, China, and Venezuela — who defend Tehran's human rights record — nearly all envoys condemned the regime's atrocities and advocated for the extension of Rehman's mandate.
At the end of the session, Rehman took the floor for his concluding remarks, during which he called on Iran to change its “contemptuous attitude on human rights.” He rebuffed Iran’s allegations of politicization, prejudice and bias, urging the Islamic Republic to allow him to visit the country.
Rehman also called on Tehran to halt targeting foreign-based media for reporting on the situation in Iran, noting that London-based Iran International and BBC Persian staff as well as their families in the country are under constant threat and persecution and death threats by the authorities.
Just last month,leaked documents revealed that Tehran’s Revolutionary Court convicted 44 foreign-based journalists and media activists in absentia two years ago over the allegation of “propaganda against the government. At the time of the verdict, the journalists were working for foreign-based Persian-language media outlets including Iran International, BBC Farsi, Manoto, Radio Farda, GEM TV and Voice of America. The document was revealed among a trove of files accessed after the hacktivist group Edalat-e Ali, or Ali’s Justice, breached the servers of the Iranian judiciary.
In an appeal to the UN Human Rights Council, Narges Mohammadi, a prominent political prisoner and Nobel Peace Prize laureate, has called for sustained efforts in addressing human rights abuses in Iran.
Mohammadi's message emphasized the urgent need for international pressure on the Iranian regime, notorious for its violations of fundamental rights and perpetration of crimes against humanity.
Mohammadi, speaking from her incarceration, highlighted the nature of the Iranian regime's actions over the past four and a half decades. She underscored the importance of continued scrutiny by international bodies such as the UN fact-finding mission and the Special Rapporteur on Human Rights to reveal the multifaceted dimensions of oppression and gender apartheid perpetrated by the regime.
Formed by the UN Human Rights Council in November 2022 in the wake of widespread protests under the banner of Woman, Life, Freedom that swept across Iran, the fact-finding mission focuses primarily on investigating the nationwide protests that occurred from 2022 to 2023. Despite repeated appeals for cooperation, the mission's experts have expressed disappointment at the Iranian authorities' failure to provide substantial information.
"The despotic religious regime, which violates human rights and commits crimes against humanity, must be systematically and comprehensively pressured by the United Nations and human rights institutions worldwide," Mohammadi declared.
Her plea comes amidst ongoing protests and activism within Iran, including the Women, Life, Freedom movement, which has galvanized public outcry against the regime's repressive tactics. Mohammadi's call resonates with the growing chorus of voices demanding accountability and justice for victims of state-sponsored violence and discrimination.
As Mohammadi continues to endure persecution for her advocacy, her words serve as a reminder of the imperative to stand in solidarity with those fighting for democracy and human rights in Iran.
After a short respite, Iran’s currency, the rial, plummeted on Monday to its lowest-ever level against the US dollar and other major currencies, just two days before the Norouz (Nowruz) holiday.
The Iranian currency had fallen to 605,000 rials per dollar earlier this month and then briefly rose to 590,000. However, despite a US sanctions waiver last week, the rial began to fall when the markets re-opened on Saturday after the Islamic weekend on Friday.
The rial was trading at 607,000 per dollar Monday afternoon local time, with each euro fetching more than 660,000 and the British pound 773,000.
The Biden administration renewed a sanctions waiver for Iraq to import electricity and natural gas from Iran, and also allowed Baghdad to pay Tehran with euros and dollars, providing a few billions of dollars to the crippled Iranian economy. However, local investors and ordinary people expect the economic crisis to deepen and inflation to rise. They buy US dollars and other major currencies to protect their capital and savings. Iran’s current annual inflation rate hovers around 50 percent.
The United States imposed tough sanction in 2018, when former President Donald Trump withdrew from the 2015 JCPOA nuclear deal. The Biden administration initiated talks in early 2021 to restore the agreement, but Iran refused a proposal in mid-2022, increasing its uranium enrichment to near weapons grade.
Iran’s proxies are also attacking Israel and international shipping in the Red Sea, while it also supplies weapons to Russia for its invasion of Ukraine.
Niger has ended its counterterrorism pact with the US over claims of secret talks to grant Iran access to its uranium.
The announcement to halt military cooperation with the US was made by a spokesman for the Nigerien junta on Saturday night, dealing a significant blow to the Biden administration's efforts to combat Islamist insurgency in the Sahel region.
US officials had been striving to salvage their relationship with Niger since the military ousted President Mohamed Bazoum in a July coup, resulting in imposed restrictions on military aid under American law.
Recent intelligence obtained by Western officials indicated that Niger's junta was considering a deal with Iran, which would grant Tehran access to Niger's substantial uranium reserves.
Talks between the two parties allegedly progressed to an advanced stage, with a preliminary agreement reportedly signed, although not finalized.
Molly Phee, US assistant secretary of state for African affairs, raised concerns about the alleged agreement with Iran, emphasizing the necessity for Niger to return to democratic governance and expressing worries over strengthening ties with Russia.
In response to the allegations, Col. Maj. Amadou Abdramane, the junta spokesman, rebuffed the US accusations.
“The government of Niger rejects the false allegations of the head of the American delegation to maintain that it has signed a secret agreement on uranium with the Islamic Republic of Iran,” Abdramane said.
Matthew Miller, State Department spokesman, refrained from commenting on the alleged uranium deal but stated that the US would provide updates as necessary. Meanwhile, Iranian officials declined to comment on the matter.
Niger, the world's seventh-largest uranium producer, exports most of its uranium to France.
An Iranian official claims that security forces acted with "responsibility" during the 2022-2023 anti-government protests, accusing protesters of being responsible for the deaths of 112 “bystanders”.
In a statement released on Sunday, Hossein Mozaffar, appointed as the head of a committee investigating violence during the protests by President Ebrahim Raisi, claimed that the committee's findings suggest that "certain elements" instigated violence amidst what were otherwise peaceful protests. Mozaffar further stated that security forces were responsible for only "a few" isolated incidents of violence against protesters.
Mozaffar claimed such violations are in no way the result of a policy of the government and should be attributed to individual agents who have been legally dealt with.
Hossein Mozaffar, the head of Iran's committee investigating violence during the 2022 protests
UN, NGOs hold regime accountable for atrocities
Contrary to the regime’s narrative of events, a United Nations fact-finding mission established in November 2022 has found that authorities committed “crimes against humanity” – and that “security forces used unnecessary and disproportionate force which resulted in the unlawful killing and injuries of protestors”. The preliminary report, released on March 8, also noted a pattern of extensive injuries to protesters’ eyes that caused the blinding of scores of women, men and children including bystanders.
The full 400-page report is scheduled to be published this week.
In a report released March 6, the London-based Justice for Iran, a human rights NGO, contended that authorities deployed special combat forces and armed security forces to suppress the protests, resulting in "crimes against humanity.”
Scores of protesters were blinded with pellet guns aimed directly at their faces, and many of the tens of thousands who were arrested were tortured. Many of the victims have also claimed they were sexually assaulted during interrogations and in prison.
The protests that spread across Iran were sparked by the death of the 22-year-old Mahsa (Jina) Amini in the custody of the morality police hijab watchers on September 16, 2022 and lasted for several months.
Based on a coroner’s report in October 2022, the statement stressed that Amini’s death was not caused by blows to the head and limbs and instead attributed it to “underlying medical conditions”.
Last week, the UN fact-finding mission said it has "established the existence of evidence of trauma to Ms Amini's body, inflicted while in the custody of the morality police". This along with the "patterns of violence by the morality police" satisfied the mission that Amini was subjected to physical violence that led to her death.
Regime labels protesters as ‘rioters’
While the UN report, and other NGO’s, have often characterized Iranian protesters as peaceful – Mozaffar’s statement instead, refers to protesters as “rioters”.
The country’s Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei has also consistently dismissed the characterization of the uprising as peaceful, instead arbitrarily labeling them as "rioters" and accusing them of engaging in "terrorist acts."
In the first official figure, issued by the authorities in Iran, Mozaffar said a total of 202 civilians were killed during the protests. In addition, he accused “rioters and terrorists” of killing 54 of the security forces as well as 25 civilians during such operations.
Mozaffar also alleged that 90 of the other citizens killed during the protests were carrying melee weapons or firearms and were killed “during terrorist operations, combat, or attack against military and law enforcement bases and vital infrastructures and law enforcement agents.”
Human rights organizations have compiled the names of at least 551 protesters, including 68 children, who were killed by security forces.
Amid international pressure to slow war efforts, Israel's PM is standing firm in his mission to rid Gaza of Iran-backed militia Hamas, urging the international community to instead pressure Iran, the region's biggest state sponsor of terror.
Addressing the international community, Benjamin Netanyahu urged a shift in focus towards the true threats in the region. "Instead of putting pressure on Israel, which is fighting a just war, against an enemy that cannot be more cruel, direct your pressure against Hamas and its patron, Iran," he urged.
Netanyahu and his ally of decades, Joe Biden, have endured increasing strains on their relationship in the wake of the Gaza war, in which Hamas claims over 30,000 civilians have been killed and the UN claims Gaza is on the brink of starvation.
"Since the beginning of the war, we have been fighting on two fronts - the military front and the political front," Netanyahu stated on Sunday at the opening of the State Security Cabinet. "There are those in the international community who are trying to stop the war now, before all its goals are achieved."
Netanyahu appeared to reference recent remarks from US Democrat leaders, including President Joe Biden and Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, whom he accused of attempting to impede Israel's efforts to both rescue the more than 130 hostages still in Gaza, and to wipe out Iran-backed terror group Hamas.
"They do this by making false accusations against the IDF, against the Israeli government and against the Prime Minister of Israel," Netanyahu claimed. "And they do this because they know that elections now will stop the war and paralyze the country for at least six months."
Netanyahu reiterated the need to continue with the country's military mission, "If we stop the war now, before all of its goals are achieved, it means that Israel has lost the war, and we will not allow that."
While the US was quick to support Israel's right to defend itself in the wake of the atrocities of Hamas's invasion on October 7, when 1,200 mostly civilians were murdered and 250 more taken hostage in Gaza, the massive death toll and international backlash has seen Biden step back, with threats to slow the flow of arms to Israel.