Monday, June 23, 2025
Iran HRM
  • Home
  • Latest News
    • Arbitrary Murders
    • Torture
    • Arrests
    • 1988 massacre
    • Right to Peaceful Protest
    • Religious and Ethnic Minorities
  • Executions
    • No to Execution Tuesdays
    • Women
    • Political prisoners
    • Public execution
    • Mass execution
  • Prisons
    • Death Sentence
    • Political prisoners
    • Prisons
  • Reports
    • Articles
    • Iran HRM monthlies
    • Infographics
  • International Reactions
    • UNHRC Resolutions
    • UN Special Rapporteur on Iran Reports
    • UN Fact Finding Mission on Iran
    • UN Expert Statements
    • European Parliament
    • Amnesty International
  • Campaigns
    • No to Execution Tuesdays Statement
  • Fallen for Freedom
    • 1988 Massacre Victims
    • Iran Protests
    • November 2019 Protests
  • About Us
  • فارسی
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Latest News
    • Arbitrary Murders
    • Torture
    • Arrests
    • 1988 massacre
    • Right to Peaceful Protest
    • Religious and Ethnic Minorities
  • Executions
    • No to Execution Tuesdays
    • Women
    • Political prisoners
    • Public execution
    • Mass execution
  • Prisons
    • Death Sentence
    • Political prisoners
    • Prisons
  • Reports
    • Articles
    • Iran HRM monthlies
    • Infographics
  • International Reactions
    • UNHRC Resolutions
    • UN Special Rapporteur on Iran Reports
    • UN Fact Finding Mission on Iran
    • UN Expert Statements
    • European Parliament
    • Amnesty International
  • Campaigns
    • No to Execution Tuesdays Statement
  • Fallen for Freedom
    • 1988 Massacre Victims
    • Iran Protests
    • November 2019 Protests
  • About Us
  • فارسی
No Result
View All Result
Iran HRM
No Result
View All Result
Home International Reactions UN-Experts

UN Expert Javaid Rehman Blasts Iran for High Executions

August 17, 2019
Javaid Rehman calls for independent inquiry into Iran's 1988 massacre
FacebookTwitterEmail

The U.N. expert on human rights in Iran Javaid Rehman says last year saw increasing restrictions on the right to freedom of expression and continuing violations of the right to life, liberty and a fair trial in the Islamic Republic, including 253 reported executions of adults and children.

Javaid Rehman’s comments came in a report — titled Situation Of Human Rights In The Islamic Republic Of Iran — written last month and circulated to the UN General Assembly on August 16.

In it, he expressed concern that Iran has more than 80 offenses punishable by death, including adultery, homosexuality, drug possession, “waging war against God, corruption on Earth, blasphemy, and insult of the Prophet” Muhammad.

He said many of the offenses are not considered serious crimes under the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights.

Among the seven child offenders reported to have been executed in 2018 were two 17-year-olds in April for alleged rape and robbery, Rehman said. “The two were reportedly forced to confess under torture.”

Javaid Rehman reiterated U.N. human rights chief Michelle Bachelet’s statement that the execution of child offenders “is absolutely prohibited and must end immediately.”

He also expressed concerns at what he called the arbitrary arrest, detention, ill-treatment, and denial of medical care for dual and foreign nationals.

He estimated there are at least 30 such cases, citing specifically Iranian-Austrian Kamran Ghaderi — who has been detained since January 2016 and is suffering “from a tumor in his leg.”

“There has been no progress made in the cases of arbitrarily detained foreign or dual nationals” aside from Iran’s release in June of Lebanese businessman Nizar Zakka, who has U.S. residency, Rehman said.

“The Islamic Republic of Iran has subjected these individuals to sham trials, which have failed to meet basic fair trial standards, and convicted them of offenses on the basis of fabricated evidence or, in some cases, no evidence at all, and has attempted to use them as diplomatic leverage,” he said.

He also said human rights defenders, members of minority communities, lawyers, journalists including from the BBC’s Persian service, labor and trade union activists and women protesting a law requiring them to wear veils know as a hijab “have continued to be intimidated, harassed, arrested and detained.”

Javaid Rehman, who is the U.N. special investigator on human rights in Iran, cited the case of human rights defender and lawyer Nasrin Sotoudeh who was sentenced in March to 38 years in prison and 148 lashes “in relation to her work defending women charged for protesting against the compulsory hijab.”

He said Iranian authorities have also stepped up pressure on trade unionists, truck drivers, teachers, factory workers and others protesting for their labor rights. They have been intimidated, arrested and charged with offenses ranging from “spreading propaganda against the state” to “disrupting public order and peace by participating in illegal gatherings,” resulting in prison sentences and flogging, he said.

Javaid Rehman pointed to human rights abuses against ethnic and religious minorities, saying the estimated 350,000 Bahai’is, considered to be the largest non-Muslim and unrecognized religious minority in Iran, “have suffered from the most egregious forms of repression, persecution and victimization.”

He said the Sunni minority in Iran constitutes an estimated 10% of the population but the constitution bars them from holding senior religious positions, and they have reportedly been refused permission to construct a mosque in the capital of Tehran since 1979. He noted that Christian converts are considered “apostates” and therefore don’t have access to officially recognized churches and must gather clandestinely in informal “house churches.”

Ethnic minorities including Arab Ahwazis, Azerbaijani Turks, Baluchis and Kurds also suffer from denial of their human rights, he said. Rehman said Kurdish political prisoners charged with national security offenses represent almost half the total number of political prisoners in Iran.

The Geneva-based UN Human Rights Council appoints special rapporteurs and independent experts to investigate and report on a specific human rights theme or a country situation. The UN says the positions are honorary and the experts are not UN staff or paid by the organization.

Iran did not immediately comment on Rehman’s remarks.

ShareTweetSend
Previous Post

Rights Group Urges World to Protest Treatment of Iranian Political Prisoner

Next Post

UN Experts Condemn Heavy Sentences Against Women’s Rights Activists

Related Posts

UN-Experts

Torture and Other Cruel Punishment in Iran

March 3, 2025
UN-Experts

Iran: UN experts call for Hijab and Chastity law to be repealed

December 14, 2024
UN-Experts

Special Rapporteur on Cultural Rights on Iran at UNGA Third Committee Session

October 26, 2024

Iran HRM white

ABOUT US

Iran Human Rights Monitor website is dedicated to support the Iranian people’s struggle for human rights and amplifies their voices on the international stage. Its purpose is to cover executions, arbitrary arrests, torture and amputation, prison’s conditions, women, social, ethnic and religious minorities oppression news in Iran and fill the gaps in information and knowledge caused by lack of access and freedom to Iran. The information provided by Iran Human Rights Monitor are in collaboration with the NCRI (National Council of Resistance of Iran)

[email protected]

  • Iran HRM Home
  • About Us

© 2021 Iran Human Rights Monitor - All rights reserved.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Add New Playlist

No Result
View All Result
  • About Us
  • Global Campaign for “No to Executions” in Iran
  • Iran HRM Home
  • Iran Prisons Information
  • Iranian Protesters Killed in November 2019 Protests
  • What will the regime of murderers do to Iran protests after Ebrahim Raisi takes office?

© 2025 Iran HRM