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UN Adopts 66th Resolution Censuring Human Rights Violations in Iran

The United Nations
Statements of Maryam Rajavi: UN adopts 66th resolution censuring human rights violations in Iran

Maryam Rajavi: Impunity for regime leaders must end;

they must be prosecuted for crime against humanity

Mrs. violations in , I emphasize that impunity for the clerical regime leaders must end & they must be prosecuted. https://t.co/9XeGohMmPh pic.twitter.com/Wc0p9rIa24

— Maryam Rajavi (@Maryam_Rajavi) November 14, 2019

The NCRI’s President-elect underscored that the most glaring and heinous example of the human rights abuses in Iran is the 1988 massacre of 30,000 defenseless political prisoners in which the regime’s former and current leaders have been involved and continue to brazenly defend it. Regrettably, to date, they have been immune from accountability. The UN’s silence and lack of action vis-à-vis this odious crime against humanity is a scar on the conscience of humanity. As such, an investigation into this horrific crime is the litmus test before the international community.

The resolution, adopted with 84 affirmative votes, expresses serious concern “at the alarmingly high frequency of the imposition and carrying-out of the death penalty, [….] in violation of its international obligations, including executions undertaken against persons on the basis of forced confessions or for crimes that do not qualify as the most serious crimes, including crimes that are overly broad or vaguely defined, in violation of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights [….] the continued imposition of the death penalty against minors [….] in violation of the Convention on the Rights of the Child.”

The resolution also voices alarm at “the widespread and systematic use of arbitrary arrests and detention [….] the case of suspicious deaths in custody, [….] the poor conditions of prisons, the practice of deliberately denying prisoners access to adequate medical treatment, which creates a

consequent risk of death,” and suppression of “the right to freedom of expression and opinion, including in digital contexts, and the right to freedom of association and peaceful assembly” and “discrimination and other human rights violations against women, including the right to freedom of association and peaceful assembly and the right to freedom of expression and opinion, [….] harassment, intimidation and persecution of political opponents, human rights defenders, women’s and minority rights defenders, labor and trade union activists, students’ rights defenders, environmentalists, academics, film-makers, journalists, bloggers, social media users and social media page administrators, media workers, religious leaders, artists, lawyers, including human rights lawyers, and their families and persons belonging to recognized and unrecognized religious minorities and their families,” [….] and “discrimination and other human rights violations against persons belonging to ethnic, linguistic or other minorities, including but not limited to Arabs, Azeris, Balochis, Kurds and Turkmen, and their defenders.”

Secretariat of the National Council of Resistance of Iran

November 14, 2019