Killing human rights in Iran under torture: World condemns Mokhtari incident
As human rights violations in Iran continue to be a source
of international concern, Germany issued an urgent statement on Iran to the
United Nations Human Rights Council on behalf of 47 countries.
German statement
The statement from Berlin stated that these countries remain
“deeply concerned” about the ongoing human rights violations in Iran,
especially with regard to the right to freedom of expression, adding that
reliable reports of arbitrary arrests, unfair trials, torture and ill-treatment
of detainees are of particular concern.
In response to the statement, the Iranian Foreign Ministry
spokesman described the European Union’s procedure for submitting a joint statement
to the Human Rights Council as “unacceptable”.
French summons
Informed sources confirmed that the French Foreign Ministry
summoned the Iranian ambassador in Paris this week in protest against Iran's
human rights record, alluding to concerns about what Paris calls serious and
ongoing violations.
France rarely comments publicly on human rights in Iran, but
on September 22, Foreign Minister Jean-Yves Le Dorian said there was a need to
do more about what he said had worsened human rights violations following the
anti-government protests in November 2019.
This step comes at a time when France, Germany and Britain
seek to preserve the nuclear agreement concluded with Tehran in 2015, and at
the same time confront the US efforts to increase pressure on Tehran and
eliminate this agreement.
Black list
On Thursday, September 24, Washington placed a number of
Iranian officials and entities on a black list due to allegations of gross
human rights violations. The European Union has not imposed sanctions on human
rights violations in Iran since 2013.
In response to a report on the European summons in the
Guardian, Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Saeed Khatibzadeh rejected what he
called interference in the country's internal affairs.
“Iran believes that the behavior that conceals political
motives and the selective moves of America and some European governments has
always been the strongest blow to the principle of human rights,” Khatibzadeh said
in a statement.
This coincides with human rights organizations publishing a
video documenting the violence towards Nader Mokhtari, an Iranian protester who
was arrested by the security forces during the November 2019 protests and then
died under torture a few days ago.
Human Rights Watch report
Mukhtari died on September 19 in the notorious Kahrizik
detention center in Tehran after he was beaten with the aim of extracting his
forced confession, according to a report by Human Rights Watch in Iran.
The 35-year-old went into a coma after being beaten with
batons, until he passed away on Saturday 19 in Kahrizak.
In a report by Human Rights Watch regarding the human rights
situation in Iran for the past year, the organization asserted that the
authorities severely suppressed freedom of expression, assembly, and
association, while security forces used unlawful lethal force to crush
protests, killing hundreds of protesters, in addition to arresting thousands.
The authorities have arbitrarily detained more than 200 human rights defenders
and imposed prison sentences and flogging on many of them.
The report noted that torture is still widespread in many
forms, including the denial of medical care, which was practiced in an
organized manner. It added that these violations were committed with impunity,
as well as cruel, inhumane and degrading punishments by judicial sentences. Dozens
of people were executed, and executions were sometimes carried out in public.
Many of those executed were under the age of eighteen at the time of their
crime. The past year also witnessed systematic violations of the right to a
fair trial, while the authorities continued to commit an ongoing crime against
humanity through enforced disappearances by systematically concealing the fate
and whereabouts of several thousand political opponents who were extrajudicially
executed in the 1980s.



