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Iran’s rights record under fire at UN

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Iran’s rights record under fire at UN

AFP – 31 Oct 2014 – Iran faced harsh criticism of its rights record Friday, with UN diplomats highlighting soaring numbers of executions and lamenting the recent hanging of a woman who murdered her attempted rapist.
Many of the more than 100 diplomats who took the floor voiced outrage at the situation of political prisoners, women and religious minorities, also decrying arrests and harassment of journalists, forced confessions and lack of access to fair trials.
Many raised the issue of the rising numbers of executions, highlighted by the UN’s special rapporteur on Iran, Ahmed Shahhed, who maintains the country has executed at least 850 people in the past 15 months.
Britain’s representative said his country was “deeply concerned at the sharp increase in executions in Iran over the past year”, while France demanded a “moratorium on the death penalty”, Germany asked for a halt to public executions.
A number of countries, including Switzerland, pointed to the case of 26-year-old Reyhaneh Jabbari as a distressing example of Iran’s execution policy.
In a move that drew international condemnation, Jabbari was hanged last Saturday for murdering a former intelligence officer to ward off an attempted rape.
“She certainly didn’t get a fair trial,” her former lawyer Mohammad Mostafaei, who fled to Norway in 2010, told AFP.
He said his client would never have received the death penalty for the 2007 stabbing of Morteza Abdolali Sarbandi, which he insisted was in self-defence and with no intention to kill, if the victim had not been a former intelligence officer from an influential family.
NGOs, blasted a lack of progress since Iran’s last review in 2010 and condemned discriminatory laws and practices infringing on the rights of women, and religious and ethnic minorities among others.
US representative Keith Harper decried “violations of freedom of religion and freedoms of expression in Iran.”
He also called for the release of those in prison for their religious beliefs, such as pastor Saeed Abedini, also an American citizen.