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European Parliament condemns human rights violations in Iran

Iranian women protesters honoured with Sakharov Prize

Parliament awarded the 2023 Sakharov Prize for Freedom of Thought to the late Jina Mahsa Amini and to the Woman, Life, Freedom movement in Iran that has been demanding strengthening women’s rights in the country.

Massive protests erupted in Iran in the wake of Amini dying in police custody in September 2022 after allegedly wearing her headscarf improperly. The government launched a violent crackdown, arresting protesters and shutting down social media.

In response to these developments, on 19 January 2023 Parliament called for more sanctions against the Iranian regime, saying that all those responsible for human rights violations should face EU sanctions, while the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps should be on the EU terrorist list.

Parliament resolutions on Iran

Amini’s death at the hands of Iranian police is far from being the only time MEPs have spoken against serious violations of human rights in the country.

In a resolution adopted in March 2023, Parliament condemned the poisoning of hundreds of school girls that had been reported in Iran. These attacks with toxic chemicals were allegedly aimed at preventing them from attending education.

In a resolution adopted in November 2023, MEPs reiterated their call for the initiation of criminal investigations into crimes committed by the Iranian authorities.

Parliament has been following the human rights situation closely in Iran. In recent years it has adopted various resolutions to call attention to the situation of people who are both EU and Iran citizens being held in prison; those of human rights defenders, such as Nasrin Sotoudeh, a prominent human rights lawyer and winner of the European Parliament’s Sakharov Prize for Freedom of Thought in 2012; and that of women’s rights defenders. MEPs also criticised the violent crackdown on anti-government protests and condemned the use of the death penalty in the country.

EU response to human rights violations in Iran over the years

Relations with Iran have proved problematic ever since the Islamic Revolution in 1979, which led among others to women’s rights being restricted in the country and the human rights situation deteriorating over the years.

The EU has been concerned about the situation for years and imposed targeted sanctions in 2011 in response to serious human rights violations in the country. Additional restrictive measures were imposed in March 2012, which have been extended every year since then.

The EU was instrumental in reaching an agreement with Iran in 2015 to prevent it developing nuclear weapons in exchange for sanctions being lifted. This stalled in 2018 after the US withdrew from the deal.

Source: European Parliament

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