Skip to main content
MS.JAHANGIR'S REPORT TO THE U.N. DOUBLES THE NEED OF AN INTERNATIONAL INVESTIGATION ON 1988 MASSACRE Created: 27 October 2017
Iran
NCRI
Human rights
Political Prisoner


In her first address to the Third Committee of the United Nations General Assembly in New York, Ms. Asma Jahangir, the United Nations Special Rapporteur on the situation of Human Rights in Iran, called for a comprehensive and independent investigation into the massacre of political prisoners in 1988.
She said, "The significant number of petitions, communications, and documentation related to the reported execution of thousands of political prisoners, men, women, and teenagers in 1988, speaks of a deep and unremitting pain that must be surely addressed.
The killings themselves have been acknowledged by some at the highest levels of the State. Almost on a daily basis, I receive heartfelt letters from the relatives of those killed calling for answers. The families of the victims have a right to remedy, reparation, and the right to know about the truth of these events and the fate of the victims without risking reprisal.”The Special Rapporteur reiterated her call for a comprehensive and independent investigation into the massacre.

Ms. Jahangir, who presented the human rights situation in Iran in the first half of 2017, expressed her concern over "the highest number of executions", including 435 executions since the beginning of the year, "executions and death sentences for people under the age of 18", "tortures, such as amputation, blinding, flogging”, convicting prisoners on charges of "corruption on earth", "the deprival of medical care as a form of punishment ", arresting and torture of human rights activists demonization against them, "targeting the families of prisoners and their lawyers", and "arrest and interrogations and threats to journalists and bloggers", the general deprivation of religious minorities and the lack of a judicial structure based on the international law and lack of right to defense in Iran.

Mohammad Hassaninejad, the representative of the regime in the United Nations, called Mrs. Jahangir's words "unrealistic accusations", "biased," and "totally political against Iran", and, by fabricating a series of false accusations, attempted to cover up the human rights situation in Iran under the rule of the mullahs. He claimed that all minorities in Iran are allowed to have activities unless they are harmful to Iranian society [read the clerical regime]. "We denounce the appointment of the country-specific Special Rapporteur… , no country should change its way of life because of Western dictation," said this diplomat terrorist of the mullahs regime who was severely outraged due to exposure of the Iranian regime's crimes by the Iranian Resistance, and thus emphasized the continuation of brutal and systematic violations of human rights in Iran.

The day before, Mohammad Javad Larijani, the head of the so-called human rights headquarters of the regime’s judiciary, also unveiled the regime's fury of the exposure of the crimes by this oppressive system and their fear of the Iranian people uprising and said: "We will not allow anyone to come anybody to conduct corruption in our country under the name of rapporteur. You see, what they did in the Islamic Republic in the name of human rights during the 2009 sedition [i.e. 2009 uprising], the most treacherous affairs were committed in the country and they dragged the country into a chaos." (State TV-October 24)

At the Third Committee session of the UN General Assembly on October 25, representatives of a large number of different countries pointed out repressive policies of the Iranian regime, including "execution and stoning and amputation", "juvenile execution", "discrimination against ethnic and religious minorities", " the need for investigation on 1988 massacre", "the practice of discrimination against women," and ..., and called for the abolition of the death sentence and the recognition of freedom of expression and assembly for the Iranian people. At this session, representatives of some of the most well-known human rights violators, such as the representative of the Syrian brutal dictator, defended the religious fascism ruling Iran.

Considering that all the leaders and organs of the clerical regime from Khamenei to the president, the judiciary and the mullahs' parliament ... have participated in criminal executions, especially the massacre of 1988, and defend it, the Iranian Resistance calls for the formation of an international committee by the United Nations to investigate this massacre and refer its dossier to the UN Security Council in order to bring officials in charge of this terrible slaughter before justice. Those who now have the highest political, judicial, and intelligence positions in Iran under the rule of the mullahs.

Secretariat of the National Council of Resistance of Iran
October 26, 2017

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

19 Million Dollar Scam in Tehran Sparks Protests19 June 2018

19 Million Dollar Scam in Tehran Sparks Protests19 June 2018 Iran Focus London, 19 Jun - In the Gisha area, a builder pre-sold several housing units that were under construction to several people simultaneously. After issuing a tracking code, the builder fled with over 80 billion tomans (approximately 19 million USD). On Monday, June 18th, a group of the betrayed home buyers staged a protest against the million-dollar scam of the Gisha housing construction in Tehran, Iran. A protester spoke about the details of this million-dollar fraud. “The housing maker, who at the same time has two real estate consultant offices in the Gisha area, was abusing access to the information system of the real estate sales by tampering the postal code contained in tracking code system, issued multiple letter of credits with official code tracking codes for various units and presold each unit at the same time to several individuals.” He added, “These plundered buyers trusted the letter of credits which ...
WE SHOULD LISTEN CLOSELY TO IRAN Created: 26 January 2018 Iran Maryam Rajavi NCRI PMOI/MEK Human rights Protests United States Opinion JCPOA Paris Middle East Supreme Leader of Iran, Ali Khamenei (Photo by Supreme Leader Press Office / Handout/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images) By Heshmat Alavi As the world continues to debate the recent Iranian outburst of protests, its "lack of leadership" as they claim, and the road ahead, there is no doubt in the minds of senior Iranian regime officials over who led, and continues to lead, this latest uprising that continues to rattle the very pillars of the mullahs' rule.Iran’s Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei made his thoughts crystal clear.“The incidents were organized” and carried out by the Iranian opposition People's Mojahedin Organization of Iran (PMOI/MEK), he said although using a different term. “The [MEK] had prepared for this months ago” and “the [MEK’s] media outlets had called for it.” The MEK is best known ...
THE MAGAZINE: From the August 21 Issue Tortured by 'Moderates' Iran's dissidents deserve a hearing AUG 21, 2017 | By KELLY JANE TORRANCE Shabnam Madadzadeh, her brother Farzad, and Arash Mohammadi. Photo credit: KELLY JANE TORRANCE / THE WEEKLY STANDARD Hassan Rouhani was sworn in for his second term as president of Iran on August 5, surrounded by fresh flowers, fervent followers, and around 500 foreign officials. Representatives of the United Kingdom, France, the United Nations, and the Vatican rubbed shoulders with the Syrian prime minister, Hezbollah second-in-command Naim Qassem, Palestinian Islamic Jihad leader and FBI Most Wanted Terrorists list member Ramadan Abdullah Shallah, and murderous Zimbabwean dictator Robert Mugabe. The Westerners didn’t seem uncomfortable in such company; indeed, European Union foreign policy chief Federica Mogherini was described as the star of the show after Iranian members of parliament elbowed through the crowd to take selfies with the...