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IRAN: Activists Spotlight
Rights Abuses on Eve of U.N. Meet
September 22, 2008 - (IPS) A day before Iranian President Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad addresses world leaders at the United Nations, human
rights activists criticised his government's record and urged the
international community to hold the president accountable during
his visit to New York.
At a press conference Monday held by Human Rights Watch and the
International Campaign for Human Rights in Iran, activists stressed
that basic human rights protections in Iran have deteriorated to
new lows.
"The most urgent in relation to human rights in Iran is repression
of civil society across the board, journalists, academics and human
rights defenders who have gone to prison during President Ahmadinejad's
tenure... [it] is a reminder to the world that there is a human
rights crisis in Iran that is not diminishing -- it is actually
escalating," Minky Worden, media director at Human Rights Watch,
told IPS.
"It's very important for journalists and U.N. representative
and other leaders to remind him that Iran is very much outside human
rights norms and that all of these documents and treaties in relate
to human rights that Ahmadinejad's government is signed on to they
are not honouring those treaties," said Worden, adding that,
"It's time for Iran to rejoin the international human rights
norm."
A new briefing paper by the two groups, "Iran Rights Crisis
Escalates: Faces and Cases from Ahmadinejad's Crackdown," documents
the dire situation for human rights defenders and key dimensions
of the human rights crisis in Iran today. Released ahead of Ahmadinejad's
arrival at the opening ceremonies of the U.N. General Assembly,
it highlights Iran's status as the world leader in juvenile executions.
Iran has executed six juvenile offenders so far in 2008, and more
than 130 other juvenile offenders have been sentenced to death and
are awaiting execution, according to human rights organisations.
"Iran is the only country to have executed such cases and we
calling on Iran to stop those executions and join the international
community in abolishing that penalty for children under 18,"
said Hadi Ghaemi, coordinator of the International Campaign for
Human Rights in Iran.
Since Ahmadinejad came to power in 2005, the total number of executions
has quadrupled in Iran, rising from 86 cases in 2005 to 317 cases
in 2007 -- almost a 300-percent increase.
"The process has been so closed that many times we don't know
the names of the executed people and whether they had a lawyer or
if there was a proper judicial due process," Ghaemi told IPS.
In July, Iran hanged 29 men in a single day in Evin prison. But
the identities of only 10 of them were announced.
"Another aspect of Mr. Ahmadinejad's administration has been
very broad repression and a crackdown on activists from religious
minorities to ethnic minorities, journalists, women right's activists
and political dissidents," Ghaemi added. "The third aspect
has been to ignore that there is a human rights crisis in Iran and
refuse to hold any dialogue or interaction with the international
community."
Before Ahmadinejad was elected, there was a so-called "critical
dialogue", a long and productive process with the European
Union, that was later on abandoned. The Iranian government has also
completely ignored the United Nations' human rights mechanism.
"Together with North Korea, Myanmar and Turkmenistan they are
the only countries that do not allow independent organisations such
as Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International to conduct research
and travel to the country," said Ghaemi.
"This has led the United Nations General Assembly to issue
a resolution requiring the secretary-general to prepare a report
of his own which should be presented to the president of General
Assembly in the coming month -- that is another reason to focus
attention on this upcoming report, and the need to hold Mr. Ahmadinejad
accountable in this front."
Mehrangiz Kar, an Iranian exile who teaches at Harvard University,
said journalists should ask "why the ministry of intelligence
of President Ahmadinejad continuously persecute the peaceful women
rights activities and accuse them of acting against national interests
to the point that they don't have even immunity to meet with each
other inside their homes."
"Iranian women are not happy with Iran's legal system,"
she added.
Akbar Ganji, one of Iran's most prominent dissidents, who spent
six years in detention, said at the press conference that democracy
and human rights may not hold much value for western governments.
"We are here as human rights defenders and therefore our issues
are completely different than the issues of western powers versus
Iran," he said.
"The present attention of western governments is focused on
the nuclear issue and that Iran should accept to suspend the enrichment
of uranium, but our issue is the systematic violation of human rights
in Iran and a non-democratic political system that is very repressive,"
added Ganji.
As evidence, he pointed to the negotiations with the governments
of Libya and North Korea. "Mr. Gaddafi [Libya's president]
shut down his nuclear activities and Ms. Rice [the U.S. secretary
of state] went to Libya and while she was there, there was no discussion
or mention of widespread human rights violations," Ganji said.
"We are worried about a similar negotiating path with Iran
that would completely avoid the human rights issues, said Ganji.
"The American government and Iranian government are in negotiation
in secretive and private at the moment. We do support negotiation
and believe in diplomatic interaction and we want normalisation
of relations and more public negotiation between two governments,
but secretive negotiations could be dangerous, because it could
lead to outcomes such as the one with Libya."
In response to a question about domestic criticisms of Ahmadinejad,
Ganji told reporters that beyond the exploding inflation rate and
lack of investment, in his belief, the government is a form of dictatorship.
"When there is no liberty and democracy we don't have the ability
to make public the economic corruption, "he said. "The
price of oil has multiplied during the past three years and unprecedented
revenues have poured into the government pocket -- but all of it
is gone, without any major economic development."
From:http://www.ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=43959
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