Gulf Today

UN rights council slams crackdown, orders probe

Turk says Iran is in ‘a full-fledged rights crisis,’ calls on officials to ‘immediatel­y stop using violence and harassment against peaceful protesters;’ footballer held

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The United Nations Human Rights Council on Thursday condemned Iran’s repression of peaceful demonstrat­ors following the death of Mahsa Amini, and voted to create a high-level investigat­ion into the deadly crackdown.

With 25 votes in favour, six opposed and 16 countries abstaining, the UN’S highest rights body agreed to create an internatio­nal fact-finding mission to probe all violations connected with Iran’s response to the ongoing protests.

There had been concerns that Iran and its allies would manage to block the resolution, and the council erupted in thunderous applause ater the vote was announced.

US ambassador Michele Taylor hailed the result. “Iranian officials will not be able to perpetrate this violent crackdown anonymousl­y,” she said in a statement. “The internatio­nal community is watching.”

The vote came at the end of a special session requested by Germany and Iceland with the backing of 50 countries to discuss the situation in Iran, rocked by two months of protests.

Iranian authoritie­s have grown increasing­ly heavy-handed in their response to the demonstrat­ions as they have spread across the country and swelled into a broad movement.

UN rights chief Volker Turk said he had offered to visit Iran but had received no response from Tehran.

He told the council that more than 300 people had been killed since Amini’s death.

Norway-based group Iran Human Rights has put the toll above 400, including more than 50 children.

“I call on the authoritie­s immediatel­y to stop using violence and harassment against peaceful protesters,” said Turk.

“The unnecessar­y and disproport­ionate use of force must come to an end,” he added, warning that Iran was in “a full-fledged human rights crisis.”

Around 14,000 people, including children, had been arrested over the protests, he said, describing this as “a staggering number,” and decried the fact that at least six death sentences had been handed down to demonstrat­ors.

Among those arrested have been a number of celebritie­s who have expressed support for the protesters, including Iranian national team footballer Voria Ghafouri, arrested on Thursday for “anti-state propaganda.”

A long line of Western diplomats took the floor in Geneva on Thursday to denounce the crackdown in Iran.

German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock called on all countries to back the independen­t internatio­nal fact-finding mission to probe all abuses connected with the ongoing protests, to ensure “those responsibl­e can be held to account.”

“Impunity prevents justice. Justice for sisters, sons, mothers. They have names. Jina, Abolfazl, Minoo,” she said, listing some of the many killed.

She told reporters that the investigat­ion would collect evidence towards holding perpetrato­rs to account -- although it remains unclear under which jurisdicti­on they would be tried.

“If we don’t collect the evidence today, if we don’t support this resolution, justice will never come to the victims,” Baerbock said.

As diplomats debated the issue in the council, dozens of people protested outside the UN, waving the flags used in Iran prior to the 1979 revolution. Propped up on the ground beside them were pictures of victims of the Iranian regime.

Iran however denounced the Western countries behind Thursday’s meeting.

Europe and the United States “lack the moral credibilit­y to preach on human rights and to request a special session on Iran”, said Khadijeh Karimi, Iran’s deputy of the vice president for women and family affairs, who wore a black chador to the Council meeting.

“Reducing the common cause of human rights to a tool for political purposes of specific groups of Western countries is appalling and disgracefu­l,” she added.

Iran received backing from some countries. China’s ambassador Chen Xu warned against “turning human rights into a tool to intervene into other countries internal affairs.”

China also put in a last-minute bid to change the text of Thursday’s resolution, asking that the request to establish an investigat­ion be removed. Only six countries supported that effort.

 ?? Associated Press ?? ±
Annalena Baerbock (left) speaks with Volker Turk during a Human Rights Council session at the European headquarte­rs of the UN in Geneva on Thursday.
Associated Press ± Annalena Baerbock (left) speaks with Volker Turk during a Human Rights Council session at the European headquarte­rs of the UN in Geneva on Thursday.

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