Arab News

US moves to remove ‘unfit’ Iran from UN women’s commission

- Washington

Vice President Kamala Harris has vowed that the US would work to remove Iran from a UN body on women’s rights as she saluted the “bravery” of women-led protests against the clerical state.

Harris said that the US would work with other nations to oust Iran from the UN Commission on the Status of Women, whose members are elected to four-year terms.

“Iran has demonstrat­ed through its denial of women’s rights and brutal crackdown on its own people that it is unfit to serve on this commission,” Harris said in a statement.

“Iran’s very presence discredits the integrity of its membership and the work to advance its mandate,” she said.

Iran is witnessing some of the most significan­t protests since the 1979 revolution in the wake of the Sept. 16 death of Mahsa Amini, a 22-year-old who had been detained by the notorious ‘morality police’ that enforces strict codes on women’s dress.

“To all of those protesting I say again, we see you and we hear you. I am inspired by your bravery, as are people around the world,” Harris said.

The US and European allies have imposed a series of sanctions on Iran over the protests and worked to help restore Internet access disrupted by authoritie­s.

Nations on the women’s commission are elected by the UN Economic and Social Council, whose members in turn are voted on by the General Assembly.

Iran, ruled by Shiite clerics, was elected to a term that ends in 2026. The US is serving through next year. Other nations on the body include Afghanista­n although the country is not represente­d at the UN by the Taliban, who stormed back to power last year and have banned women from government jobs and forbidden secondary education for girls.

Harris announced the diplomatic effort ahead of an informal UN Security Council session led by the US and Albania.

Iran’s envoy to the UN, Amir Saied Iravani, called the meeting a “flagrant violation” into the country’s domestic affairs and denounced US sanctions against his country.

Shirin Ebadi, a Nobel Peace Prizewinni­ng Iranian rights lawyer now living in exile, pointed to the jailing of reporters who exposed Amini’s case, saying the state considered “journalism a publishabl­e crime.”

“The people of Iran ask Western government­s, especially the US, to refrain from entering into any type of agreements that will help the survival of the regime,” she said, amid a deadlock in diplomacy to restore a 2015 nuclear accord.

“The Islamic Republic does not spend the funds for the welfare of the people but, on the contrary, buys more weapons,” she said.

The actress and activist Nazanin Boniadi rejected the “myth” that a compulsory headscarf was part of Iranian culture and should be respected.

“You don’t need to subjugate people into observing cultural norms,” she said.

“Where schoolgirl­s are defying a lifetime of indoctrina­tion by rising up in classrooms and people are taking to the streets in the tens of thousands to protest something despite the risk of death at the hands of the authoritie­s, you can safely assume that’s not part of their culture.”

‘Iran has demonstrat­ed through its denial of women’s rights and brutal crackdown on its own people that it is unfit to serve on this commission. Iran’s very presence discredits the integrity of its membership and the work to advance its mandate.’

 ?? AFP ?? Iran is witnessing some of the most significan­t protests since the 1979 revolution in the wake of the Sept. 16 death of Mahsa Amini, a 22-year-old who had been detained by the ‘morality police.’
AFP Iran is witnessing some of the most significan­t protests since the 1979 revolution in the wake of the Sept. 16 death of Mahsa Amini, a 22-year-old who had been detained by the ‘morality police.’

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