PRESS RELEASE
Hardline Minister Mottaki ‘Unwelcome’ at UN Human Rights Council
Geneva, March 12, 2007 — An international coalition of human rights groups called on nine European government ministers visiting Geneva today to rebuke Iran for its repression of women, dissidents and religious and ethnic minorities.
The letter by Women’s Federation for World Peace, Hope for Africa, the Open Society Institute and 20 other NGOs from across Europe, North America, Africa and Asia protested Iranian Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki’s appearance today at the UN Human Rights Council, and urged German Foreign Minister Steinmeier, Dutch Foreign Minister Verhagen, Swedish Foreign Minister Bildt and six other leaders to speak out during their turn at the Council podium. Mr. Mottaki was responsible for organizing the December conference in Tehran questioning the Holocaust.
According to Hillel Neuer, executive director the Geneva-based UN Watch, “the Iranian foreign minister is seeking to use the highest human rights body to legitimize his regime. To be silent about Iran’s human rights abuses—such as its recent arrest of women peacefully demonstrating for their rights—is to condone them.”
The text of the appeal follows below.
To: President Calmy-Rey of Switzerland; Foreign Minister Steinmeier of Germany, Foreign Minister Asselborn of Luxembourg, Foreign Minister Verhagen of the Netherlands, Foreign Minister Bildt of Sweden, Foreign Minister Moratinos of Spain, Justice Minister Clement of France, Foreign Minister Kieber-Beck of Liechtenstein, and Vice-Minister of Foreign Affairs Johansen of Norway
March 12, 2007
All of you will address the United Nations Human Rights Council on Monday, March 12, 2007—as will Mr. Manouchehr Mottaki, the Foreign Minister of the Islamic Republic of Iran. We, the undersigned human rights non-governmental organizations, are deeply concerned that Minister Mottaki will seek to use the forum and authority of the new Council to legitimize his government at the same time as it perpetrates systematic violations of fundamental individual liberties. Accordingly, we urge you, as representatives of free and democratic states, to use the occasion today to speak out strongly against Iran’s gross violations of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, and to endorse efforts to restore the mandate of the independent expert into the situation of human rights in Iran.
Iran’s abysmal human rights record is well known and documented. Recently, the UN General Assembly, in Resolution 61/176 of 19 December 2006, cited Iran for numerous gross violations of human rights, including:
- violence against women
- harassment and intimidation of journalists, human rights defenders, political opponents, and workers’ advocates
- absence of due process
- torture
- public execution
- increasing discrimination, including violent crackdowns, and other human rights violations against Arabs, Azeris, Baluchis and Kurds, as well as Baha’is, Christians, Jews, Sufis and Sunni Muslims.Just last week, security police arrested more than 30 women for peacefully exercising their internationally-protected rights to free expression and assembly. Although the regime has since released most of them, it has promised to re-arrest the women if they assemble again.
In addition to all of this, the government of Iran, in violation of recent UN resolutions, has led an international campaign to deny the genocide of the Holocaust, including in statements and an official letter submitted to the Human Rights Council. It is unconscionable for Iran to exploit the UN’s foremost human rights forum to perpetrate, in the words of French President Jacques Chirac, “a crime against the truth, the absolute perversion of the soul and spirit.”
Iran also has shown its contempt for the Council by sending an official implicated in brutal abuses—the man responsible for the torture and murder of Ms. Zahra Kazemi, a Canadian-Iranian journalist—to represent it at the Council’s inaugural session.
In light of all of the above, the Iranian Foreign Minister’s appearance at the Council podium cannot pass in silence. We appeal to you to hold Iran accountable for its gross violations of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, and to endorse efforts to restore the mandate of the independent expert into the situation of human rights in Iran.
Sincerely yours,
International Humanist and Ethical Union
Dr. Rob Buitenweg, Vice President
The Netherlands
Indian Social Institute
John Thoonunkaparambil, Coordinator, Human Rights and Law Unit
India
Institute for Humanist Studies
Larry Jones, President
U.S.A.
Open Society Institute
Mike Amitay, Senior Policy Analyst
U.S.A.
Worldwide Organization for Women
Afton Beutler, Vice President of International Affairs
Switzerland
Thailand Burma Border Consortium
Sally Thompson, Deputy Executive Director
Thailand
International ARC PEACE
Sven Thiberg, Professor Emeritus
Sweden
Hope for Africa International
Dr. Charles Mwape, Regional Director
Zambia
Transnational Radical Party
Matteo Mecacci, UN representative
United Nations Headquarters
Greek Helsinki Monitor
Panayote Dimitras, Spokesperson
Greece
Women Environmental Programme
Priscilla M Achakpa
Nigeria
Scholars for Peace in the Middle East
Edward S. Beck, President
U.S.A.
Presentation Congregation Lismore
Sr. Anne Shay, Justice Contact
Australia
World Federation of Scientific Workers
Dr. Shreesh Juyal, Vice President
Canada
United Nations Watch
Hillel C. Neuer, Executive Director
Switzerland
Association of World Citizens
Virginia Swain, ECOSOC Representative
U.S.A.
WUPJ
R. Francois Garai, Main Representative
Switzerland
Endeavour Forum
Babette Francis, National & Overseas Coordinator
Australia
International Council of Jewish Women
Léonie de Picciotto
Switzerland
Fédération International des Femmes des Carrières Juridiques
Virginia S. Mueller, Representative
U.S.A.
World Federation for Mental Health
Anne Yamada, Representative
Switzerland
Women’s Federation for World Peace, International
Elisabeth Riedl, European Secretary General
Austria