IBAHRI condemns Iranian government for killing protestors for defending women's rights
Iran’s security forces are imposing extrajudicial killings, enforced disappearances and arbitrary detention on protestors, who are defending women’s rights in the country, the International Bar Association’s Human Rights Institute (IBAHRI) has voiced strong condemnation.
Accounts cite that at least 185 people, including 19 minors, have been killed, hundreds injured, and thousands arrested by the security forces following the death of Mahsa Amini, who died while in police custody after being arrested for not wearing a headscarf in a way deemed “appropriate” by Iran’s “morality” police.
“Once again, the rights of Iranian women are being violated wholesale. Iranian security forces have continuously shown total disregard for the sanctity of life,” said IBAHRI co-chair and immediate past secretary-general of the Swedish Bar Association Anne Ramberg Dr Jur hc.
“We call for a halt to the suppression, for the morality police to be dismantled and compulsory veiling laws, which sparked the protests after their brutal enforcement, to be repealed.”
“The IBAHRI calls for prompt, independent and transparent investigations into the death of Mahsa Amini and all the protestors that have died during the ruthless crackdown in Iran following demonstrations over the death of Ms Amini while in police custody,” Ms Ramberg announced.
The IBAHRI suggests that an open and transparent investigation into the causes leading to the death of Ms Amini could be conducted by the special rapporteurs on torture, on violence against women and girls, and on the situation of human rights in Iran.
Furthermore, the IBAHRI called on the government in Iran to immediately stop the use of lethal force in policing peaceful assemblies, to respect individuals’ rights to exercise freedom of expression, assembly, and association, and repeal all legislation and policies that discriminate on the grounds of sex and gender, in line with international standards.
Increasingly, the Iranian regime is imprisoning prominent women’s rights activists who peacefully campaign against compulsory veiling laws, including human rights lawyer Nasrin Sotoudeh, as well as Mojgan Keshavarz, Yasaman Aryani, and Monireh Arabshahi.
Against this backdrop, Iran’s election to the United Nations Commission on the Status of Women in April 2021 was ill-considered by many.
“Iran’s ascension to the UN Commission on the Status of Women earlier this year is a testament to the surreal dissonance between what happens at the international level and the harsh reality Iranian women and girls are facing on the ground,” commented IBAHRI co-chair Mark Stephens CBE.
“With four Western states having elected Iran to the top women’s rights body, the international community now has an onus in ending the culture of systematic impunity and in protecting the rights of women in Iran.
“A woman should not have to lose her life because she wore a piece of material on her head in a way that was not acceptable to a man.”