Iranian resistance continues moves to open UN investigation into Raisi’s crimes
The Iranian community in Britain is
continuing its movements against the Iranian regime, as it launched a series of
new activities since Saturday, August 28, to demand the opening of a United
Nations investigation into the 1988 massacre of political prisoners in Iran, as
members of the Anglo-Iranian communities and supporters of the National Council
of Resistance of Iran (NCRI) held an exhibition to honor the memory of the
30,000 political prisoners who were executed, highlighting the involvement of
new Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi in this massacre.
Calling for
investigation
The Iranian community called for a
UN investigation into Raisi as a first step and urged the United Kingdom to
lead international efforts in this regard as part of the core group concerned
with the resolution of the Third Committee of the United Nations General
Assembly, noting that Amnesty International and the UN Special Rapporteur for Iran
previously documented evidence that Raisi was a prominent member of the Tehran
Death Committee, making him responsible for thousands of executions.
A group of UN Special Rapporteurs
stressed in September last year that “the failure of the international community
and the United Nations to act and hold perpetrators to account in the past 33
years has fostered a culture of impunity in Iran, led to the suffering of
families and survivors, and is the main cause of the appalling human rights
situation in Iran.”
The People's Mojahedin Organization
of Iran (PMOI) said in a statement, “The Anglo-Iranian communities called on
the UK government to break their silence, abandon the policy of inaction, and
recognize the 1988 massacre as genocide and a crime against humanity,” noting
that the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office said in Its latest report
on human rights and democracy published last July, “We will continue to hold
Iran accountable on a wide range of human rights issues through the use of our
membership in the United Nations Human Rights Council and elsewhere in the
United Nations, through frequent contact with the Iranian government, and by
working with our European partners.”
Facing
repression
The Anglo-Iranian communities urged
the international community and the UK to realize that the Iranian regime and
government depend on brutal repression to stay in power, noting that
accountability rather than dialogue will prevent systemic human rights abuses
in Iran.
They said the UK should hold the
regime's leaders, including Raisi, accountable by investigating and prosecuting
them for the 1988 mass extrajudicial executions, which amounted to crimes
against humanity.
The Iranian community in Britain
organized a march that included former political prisoners who spent more than
ten years in notorious prisons in Iran and eyewitnesses to the 1988 massacre
who faced the death committees, as well as many human rights and legal experts.
The community held an exhibition to
highlight that these mass extrajudicial executions were in fact a
state-approved campaign to eliminate organized opposition to the regime, as
more than 90 percent of victims in 1988 belonged to Iran's main opposition, the
PMOI. Posters showed support for the popular movement for justice and drew attention
to a letter from PMOI leader Massoud Rajavi to the Secretary-General of the
United Nations at the time, urging international action to stop the massacre.