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UN council ousts Iran from UN commission backing women

- By Edith M. Lederer

UNITED NATIONS—THE UN Economic and Social Council voted Wednesday to immediatel­y oust Iran from the UN’S premiere global body fighting for gender equality because of its systematic violation of the rights of women and girls, a decision the United States hailed as “historic” and Iran claimed was based on “fabricated allegation­s.”

The Us-sponsored resolution was sparked by Iran’s ongoing brutal crackdown on peaceful protesters who took to the streets in September after the death of a 22-year-old woman taken into custody by the morality police. At least 488 people have been killed since the demonstrat­ions began, according to Human Rights Activists in Iran, a group that’s been monitoring the protests, while another 18,200 people have been detained by authoritie­s.

The vote in the 54-member council known as ECOSOC to remove Iran from the Commission on the Status of Women for the remainder of its 2022-2026 term was 29-8 with 16 abstention­s.

US Ambassador Linda Thomas greenfield called the vote “historic,” the first-ever ouster of a commission member and “the right thing to do.”

“I think we sent a strong message to the Iranian government and we sent a strong message to Iranian women,” she told reporters after the vote.

Before the vote, Thomas greenfield cited the death of Mahsa Amini who was accused of wearing her headscarf improperly by the morality police; the solitary confinemen­t of two women reporters who told her story; and the young women and girls who have been killed or disappeare­d for speaking out along with thousands of protesters reportedly detained and tortured.

US National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan said the vote shows a growing consensus among the United States and its allies and partners around the world that Iran must be held accountabl­e for “atrocities” such as the recent “horrifying executions” of protesters in Tehran.

Establishe­d in 1946, the Commission on the Status of Women plays a leading role in promoting women’s rights, documentin­g the reality of women’s lives around the world and shaping global standards to empower women and achieve gender equality.

Its 45 members, from all regions of the world, are elected for four-year terms by the Economic and Social Council. Iran was elected from the Asian region with 43 votes.

Before Wednesday’s vote, Iran’s UN Ambassador Amir Saeid Iravani accused the United States of using its “longstandi­ng hostility toward the Iranian people” under “the guise of human rights” to remove Iran from the commission. He then cited efforts by the US and its allies to topple “multiple legitimate government­s,” implying that it is also trying to topple Iran’s.

Iravani said the US resolution would impede the advancemen­t of Iranian women who he said are “strong, dynamic, self-sufficient and intelligen­t” participan­ts in the country’s economic, social and political life.

He called the US resolution “illegal” because the Commission on the Status of Women has no rules on terminatin­g an elected member and warned that it might “create a dangerous precedent with farreachin­g consequenc­es.”

After the vote, Iran’s deputy ambassador Zahra Ershadi categorica­lly rejected the resolution and what she called “the baseless and fabricated allegation­s” made against Iran. She insisted the government protects women’s rights, “condemns any politiciza­tion of women’s rights, and rejects all falsehoods and accusation­s made in particular by the US and certain EU members in this meeting.”

Russia opposed the resolution and before the vote its deputy ambassador, Gennady Kuzmin, accused the US and its allies of deciding “to pressure their political opponents, trying to discredit them, and at the same time purge the UN Commission on the Status of Women [of] a sovereign and influentia­l player.”

He proposed that ECOSOC should ask for a UN legal opinion before the council took action on the resolution on whether a vote was in accordance with UN and ECOSOC procedures.

Under ECOSOC rules, such a request requires 24 hours advance notice in writing, and a vote was called on waiving the 24-hour rule. ECOSOC voted 12-26 with 11 abstention­s against waiving the 24-hour rule.

So after several more speeches, ECOSOC voted on the US resolution and approved it.

The resolution expresses “serious concern” over Iran’s actions since September “to continuous­ly undermine and increasing­ly suppress the human rights of women and girls, including the right to freedom of expression and opinion, often with the use of excessive force, by administer­ing policies flagrantly contrary to the human rights of women and girls and to the mandate of the Commission on the Status of Women, as well as through the use of lethal force resulting in the deaths of peaceful protesters, including women and girls.”

Thomas-greenfield, the US ambassador, said in an interview after the vote that US legal experts determined that the US resolution was within ECOSOC rules.

“It’s significan­t in the sense that it sends a message to the government of Iran that what you’re doing is unacceptab­le to the world—we’re not going to stand by and buy it,” she said.

“Iran said in the meeting that these were antics by the US government, but we got 29 people to support this one effort to show that the world was behind the people and the women in particular in Iran,” Thomas-greenfield said.

 ?? AP/MIDDLE EAST IMAGES ?? IN this photo taken by an individual not employed by the Associated Press and obtained by the AP outside Iran, Iranians protests the death of 22-year-old Mahsa Amini after she was detained by the morality police, in Tehran on October 1, 2022. In a report published by The Iranian student news agency, Nezamoddin Mousavi, an Iranian lawmaker said Sunday, December 4, 2022, that Iran’s government was ‘‘paying attention to the people’s real demands,’’ a day after another key official announced that the country’s religious police force had been closed following months of deadly anti-government protests.
AP/MIDDLE EAST IMAGES IN this photo taken by an individual not employed by the Associated Press and obtained by the AP outside Iran, Iranians protests the death of 22-year-old Mahsa Amini after she was detained by the morality police, in Tehran on October 1, 2022. In a report published by The Iranian student news agency, Nezamoddin Mousavi, an Iranian lawmaker said Sunday, December 4, 2022, that Iran’s government was ‘‘paying attention to the people’s real demands,’’ a day after another key official announced that the country’s religious police force had been closed following months of deadly anti-government protests.

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