John, the latest Human Rights Tracker update from NIAC is here.Click here to view this update in your browser. [[link removed]]
# [#]
[link removed] [[link removed]]The United Nations General Assembly Third Committee – which considers measures on human rights – approved a resolution [[link removed]] on November 16th condemning the Iranian government’s human rights abuses and expressing support for the Iranian protesters who are fighting for their basic rights and freedom. According to a UN statement [[link removed]] , the resolution “sends a message to the Iranian people that the international community stands with them.” Furthermore, it calls “for independent, impartial, and transparent investigations and accountability for the Government of Iran’s continued human rights violations.” Recently, the ambassadors of Germany and Iceland sent a letter [[link removed]] to the UN Office in Geneva requesting a special session of the Human Rights Council on the deteriorating human rights situation in Iran. The special session [[link removed]] is now scheduled to happen on November 24th.
The international community has also imposed sanctions on Iranian organizations and officials who have facilitated the Islamic Republic’s repression and brutal crackdown on protesters in recent months. Last week, the European Union imposed sanctions on 29 individuals—including four who were directly involved in Jina Mahsa Amini’s arrest—and three organizations who are responsible for the government’s violent response to peaceful protests. Furthermore, in a statement [[link removed]] last week, the U.S. Department of the Treasury announced sanctions [[link removed]] on six senior employees of the state-run Islamic Republic of Iran Broadcasting (IRIB), which has been accused of facilitating the Iranian government’s campaign of mass censorship and suppression. Recently, Iranian authorities have coerced individuals into stating publicly that their relatives who died during the protests were not killed by the government’s security forces. Some of these forced confessions have been produced and broadcasted by the IRIB.
NIAC emphatically supports the resounding calls for an independent, impartial, and transparent investigation into the Iranian government’s crackdown on dissent in recent months. We believe that the UN has a responsibility to investigate and ensure accountability for the Islamic Republic’s violations of the Iranian people’s human rights that are protected under international law. Furthermore, we support the application of targeted sanctions against Iranian leaders and organizations who are responsible for international crimes or have served in some capacity to aid and abet or conceal these crimes. The United Nations and all governments with human rights commitments must enact effective measures to enforce international law and seek to stop the Iranian authorities from continuing the unjust killing, imprisonment, torture, and censorship of the civilian population.
NIAC works to advance the Iranian-American community.
Your support helps us to do more of this important work → [[link removed]]
[link removed] [[link removed]]
This is an email from the National Iranian American Council (NIAC). NIAC's Human Rights Tracker [[link removed]] is part of our efforts to spotlight human rights in Iran as a means of holding the Iranian government accountable. As an American organization, we don't have a role to play in the domestic affairs of Iran. But we do have an obligation to support international human rights standards to which the U.S. and Iran are party.
Thanks for being a subscriber. Our address is PO Box 65439, Washington, DC 20006. You've received this email because you subscribed to our Human Rights Tracker updates. You can unsubscribe from all emails from NIAC or change your preferences at any time by clicking here [[link removed]] . If you were forwarded this email by a friend, you can subscribe to receive our updates here [[link removed]] . Thanks for your support.