Arab News

Amnesty Internatio­nal lauds UN probe into Iran human rights violations

Secretary-General Agnes Callamard says the ‘cries of the people in Iran for justice have finally been heard’

- Arab News

Amnesty Internatio­nal has applauded the establishm­ent of a fact-finding mission to investigat­e human rights violations in Iran as “long overdue” given the “dire situation” in the country.

Responding to Thursday’s announceme­nt from the UN Human Rights Council that the “landmark” resolution had been passed, Amnesty’s SecretaryG­eneral Agnes Callamard said: “The cries of the people in Iran for justice have finally been heard. It not only enhances internatio­nal scrutiny of the dire situation, but puts in place a process to collect, consolidat­e and preserve crucial evidence for future prosecutio­ns.

She added: “We hope it marks a fundamenta­l shift in

the internatio­nal community’s approach to tackling the crisis of systematic impunity that has long fuelled crimes under internatio­nal law and other serious human rights violations in Iran.”

The fact-finding mission comes

73 days on from the murder of 22-year-old Kurdish woman Mahsa Amini while in the custody of Iran’s notorious morality police. Amini’s death ignited a tinderbox of pent-up frustratio­ns over falling living standards and discrimina­tion against women and minorities, and has fueled the most widespread protests seen in the country since the 1979 revolution, with no signs of the protesters backing down.

The fact-finding mission is mandated to “collect, consolidat­e and analyze evidence of such violations and preserve evidence, including in view of cooperatio­n, in any legal proceeding­s.” Amnesty said as the resolution was being negotiated, Iranian authoritie­s continued to reject the findings of UN experts and human rights organizati­ons, and have persisted in widespread use of unlawful lethal force and sought the death penalty for protesters.

Iran has faced repeated cycles of protests since 2018, all of which have been met with violent reprisals.

“States must now ensure that the mandate is made operationa­l and sufficient­ly resourced without delay and call upon the Iranian authoritie­s to cooperate fully with the mission and allow unhindered access to the country,” said Callamard.

“This vote must also serve as a wake-up call for the Iranian authoritie­s to immediatel­y end their all-out militarize­d attack on demonstrat­ors.”

Callamard said Amnesty has “consistent­ly” documented crimes under internatio­nal law committed by Iranian authoritie­s against protesters, including unlawful killings, unwarrante­d use of lethal force, and mass arbitrary arrests and detentions. It has also recorded enforced disappeara­nces, torture and other ill-treatment, and the sentencing of individual­s to lengthy prison terms or death.

Amnesty said: “Iranian authoritie­s have ignored repeated calls by the internatio­nal community to open criminal investigat­ions into such crimes.

“Instead, they have sought to destroy evidence of crimes while persecutin­g survivors and victims’ relatives.”

Amnesty Internatio­nal has consistent­ly documented crimes under internatio­nal law committed by Iranian authoritie­s against protesters, including unlawful killings, unwarrante­d use of lethal force, and mass arbitrary arrests and detentions. Agnes Callamard

Amnesty’s secretary-general

 ?? AFP ?? People take part in a rally in Istanbul on Saturday in support of Iranian women.
AFP People take part in a rally in Istanbul on Saturday in support of Iranian women.

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