Arab News

EU politician­s call for blacklisti­ng IRGC

- DR. MAJID RAFIZADEH | SPECIAL TO ARAB NEWS

It ‘is mainly active in Syria and Iraq and must be put on the internatio­nal blacklists.’

IRAN’S human rights violations and foreign military interventi­ons have reached unpreceden­ted levels. This has led to condemnati­on from hundreds of members of the European Parliament (MEPs), and calls for the designatio­n of Iran’s Republican Guard Corps (IRGC), which is involved in multiple regional conflicts, as a terrorist organizati­on. According to Amnesty Internatio­nal, Iran accounted for 55 percent of the world’s recorded executions in 2016.

Meanwhile, domestic resentment toward the regime is building amid a renewed focus on the 1988 massacre of thousands of political dissidents. The human rights situation has significan­tly worsened under President Hassan Rouhani. During his first four years, Iran had the highest number of executions per capita in the world, with nearly 3,000 hangings. On Iranian television, Rouhani described executions as “a good law.”

He has been promoting controvers­ial figures such as his justice minister. The MEPs said the minister is a self-confessed murderer who was a member of the Death Committee, ordering the execution of more than 30,000 political prisoners in 1988. Rouhani comes from within the system and is loyal to the clerical regime. His election was orchestrat­ed, not democratic.

More than 150 MEPs said: “The elections in Iran are not free and fair. Opposition is banned. All candidates have to declare their heartfelt belief to the concept of supreme clerical rule. An unelected body named the ‘Guardian Council,’ whose members are appointed by supreme leader Ayatollah Khamenei, disqualifi­es most of the candidates.”

The MEPs also urged “the UN High Commission­er for Human Rights and the Human Rights Council to set up a commission of inquiry to investigat­e the 1988 massacre of political prisoners in Iran.”

Western government­s should make ties to Iran contingent on halting executions and improving human rights. Concrete action should be taken against the IRGC’s military adventuris­m, which is destabiliz­ing the region. The MEPs, including four vice presidents and 23 committee and delegation chairs, underscore­d Tehran’s destructiv­e regional role.

The IRGC’s financial activities should be closely monitored, as it controls significan­t parts of Iran’s wealth and economy. It exports Tehran’s revolution­ary ideals while suppressin­g domestic opposition. “We are very much concerned by the destructiv­e role of the Iranian regime in the region,” said MEP Gerard Deprez.

The IRGC “is mainly active in Syria and Iraq and must be put on the internatio­nal blacklists. The IRGC also runs most of the Iranian economy. So our European companies who want to sign economic deals with Iran take a high risk of dealing directly and indirectly with the IRGC, which is really a terrorist organizati­on.”

Tens of thousands of Iranians will attend a gathering in Paris on July 1 to protest Tehran’s actions. Deprez, president of the parliament­ary group Friends of a Free Iran, said he will attend the gathering “to express our solidarity with the Iranian democratic opposition.”

Dr. Majid Rafizadeh is a Harvard-educated, Iranian-American political scientist. He is a leading expert on Iran and US foreign policy, a businessma­n and president of the Internatio­nal American Council. He serves on the boards of the Harvard Internatio­nal Review, the Harvard Internatio­nal Relations Council and the US-Middle East Chamber for Commerce and Business. He can be reached on Twitter @Dr_Rafizadeh.

Q

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Saudi Arabia