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Iran's continued persecution of Christians raises alarm, says UN rapporteur

Feb 4, 2025, 12:00 GMT+0Updated: 15:57 GMT+0
A church in Iran's Khuzestan province, southern Iran.
A church in Iran's Khuzestan province, southern Iran.

UN Special Rapporteur on human rights in Iran, Mai Sato, has raised alarm over the persecution of Christians in the country, calling it a matter of serious concern that requires immediate attention.

Mai Sato addressed Article18’s joint side event at the UN in Geneva in late January, calling it a “timely opportunity” to assess the reality faced by Christian communities in Iran. Article18, a nonprofit organization, advocates for persecuted Christians in Iran and promotes religious freedom.

Sato spotlighted the plight of Christians in Iran the day before the country's Universal Periodic Review (UPR), a key UNHRC mechanism aimed at improving human rights, with Iran being one of 14 countries under review by the UPR Working Group.

Sato noted that previous UN rapporteurs had raised concerns about the systemic persecution of Christians in Iran in 2011, 2013, 2018, and 2020, yet little progress has been made.

“The violations reported in these communications mirror the very issues that presenters at this event will be discussing today,” she said, citing multiple breaches of Iran’s obligations under the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR), which Iran ratified in 1975.

These include restrictions on religious freedom, freedom of expression, peaceful assembly, privacy, and non-discrimination.

Titled "Christians in the Islamic Republic of Iran: Legal Protections vs. Lived Realities," the Article18 event also included testimonies from individuals affected by religious persecution.

Sato urged civil society and what she called other stakeholders, to continue sharing evidence of Christian persecution and other religious minorities, saying the reports help keep the issue on the international agenda.

UN Rapporteur on Freedom of Religion or Belief Nazila Ghanea also contributed to the event.

In her remarks, Ghanea noted Article18's latest report's findings of the Iranian government's discriminatory treatment of Christian converts, citing severe sentencing in 2024, with 96 Christians facing 263 years in prison, 37 years of internal exile, and substantial fines, emphasizing the human cost behind these figures.

Although Christians are acknowledged as a religious minority in Iran, authorities impose severe penalties, particularly on those who convert from Islam to Christianity.

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Iran arrests two female fans at football match

Feb 4, 2025, 11:32 GMT+0

Iran’s judiciary announced that two female spectators have been arrested during a football match at Tehran's Azadi Stadium as the government's push to ban women from games continues.

The judiciary said the women were detained during a domestic match between Persepolis and Tractor FC for allegedly engaging in “immoral behavior " but did not specify details or the exact charges they face.

Women have been banned from attending football matches in major stadiums like Azadi since the 1979 revolution, with authorities citing concerns over the stadium environment.

While FIFA and human rights organizations have pressured Iran to lift the ban, access remains highly restricted, the government using the country's strict Islamic laws to enforce segregation in what the UN and rights groups have termed "gender apartheid".

In 2019, FIFA intervened after the death of Sahar Khodayari, known as the "Blue Girl," who set herself on fire after being arrested for trying to enter a stadium disguised as a man.

In 2022, a limited number of women were briefly allowed into domestic league matches in Mashhad, though many were blocked from entering despite having tickets.

In spite of the bans at home, Qatar's World Cup in 2022 saw huge numbers of women turn out to support Iran.

Iran files case against two actors for shaking hands at film festival

Feb 4, 2025, 10:45 GMT+0

Iran’s judiciary has filed a legal case against filmmaker Marzieh Boroumand and actor Reza Babak for shaking hands on stage at the state-run Fajr Film Festival, breaking the country's strict Islamic laws.

A report by the judiciary-affiliated Mizan news agency said legal proceedings on the case took place in "recent days" but did not provide further details.

Boroumand, a filmmaker and puppeteer, is best known for her contributions to children's television, while Babak is a veteran actor in Iranian theater, television, and cinema industry.

Under Iran’s Islamic laws, physical contact between unrelated men and women is generally prohibited in public, including handshakes.

While enforcement of the law varies, authorities have prosecuted public figures in the past for similar incidents.

In 2015, Iranian cartoonist Atena Farghadani was charged with "indecent conduct" and "illegitimate sexual relations" after allegedly shaking hands with her male lawyer.

At the time, Amnesty International condemned the charges against Faraghdani saying, “It is clearly both absurd and a violation of the right to privacy to consider a man and a woman shaking hands as a criminal offence.”

Tehran shopkeepers protest rial’s steep devaluation, soaring prices

Feb 4, 2025, 09:59 GMT+0

Shopkeepers in southern Tehran went on strike on Tuesday protesting runaway inflation and the rial’s steep devaluation, according to videos received by Iran International.

The shopkeepers protested around Molavi Street, Mohammadieh Square, and South Khayyam Street, an area known as a historic trading region of Iran's capital, holding up signs demanding economic stability and relief from soaring prices.

Similar protests were staged last year in late December when business owners and employees in Tehran’s historic bazaar staged a rare strike, spurring demonstrations in other commercial hubs in the capital.

On Tuesday, every US dollar was exchanged for 843,100 rials in the open market.

Iran’s currency has lost more than 30% of its value since early September last year, and inflation of consumer good has spiked to 50%, based on media reports from Tehran.

The Iranian rial’s sharp depreciation has had ripple effects across the economy. For merchants, it has created an untenable mix of higher costs and reduced consumer demand as at least one third of Iran is now living below the poverty line.

Since 2018, when the US re-imposed economic sanctions under the maximum pressure policy, Iranian currency has dropped nearly 20-fold. In the last five months alone, the rial has lost a further 30% of its value.

Over one third of Iranians are now living below the poverty line amid the worst economic crisis since the founding of the Islamic Republic.

Since the crisis kicked in back in 2022, it has led to many Iranians bartering for food items.



Democratic senator calls Musk effort to shutter USAID a gift to Iran

Feb 3, 2025, 21:54 GMT+0

Senator Chris Van Hollen called new government efficiency czar Elon Musk's bid to shut down the US international development organization USAID a gift to adversaries including Iran.

"Make no mistake this effort by Elon Musk and so-called DOGE to shut down the Agency of international development is an absolute gift to our adversaries, to Russia to China, to Iran and others because AID is an essential instrument of US foreign policy and US national security policy," Van Hollen said.

DOGE is the Department of Government Efficiency formed and led by world's richest man Musk under President Donald Trump. Musk on Monday said Trump wants to shut USAID down, and its offices were closed and employees told to work from home.

"This has nothing to do with making the US government more efficient and everything to do with aiding and abetting our adversaries around the world," the Maryland junior senator told a cheering crowd outside USAID's Washington DC headquarters.

Human rights activists have expressed concern about the impact of Trump's earlier 90-day pause in foreign aid on Iran-related programs, with some saying the order could help Tehran further restrict its people’s access to information.

The United States has supported civil society and human rights in Iran on everything from documenting abuses by Tehran, Washington's Mideast arch enemy, to backing efforts to transcend official internet censorship.

Musk in a discussion broadcast on the social media platform he owns X said USAID was "beyond repair". Trump told reporters on Sunday that USAID had "been run by a bunch of radical lunatics ... We're getting them out, and then we'll make a decision."

Iran secretly looking for shortcut to build atomic bomb in months - NYT

Feb 3, 2025, 21:06 GMT+0

The United States is convinced that a secret team of scientists in Iran is exploring a faster way to develop a nuclear weapon - within months - should Tehran decide to build one, The New York Times reported on Monday.

Iranian engineers and scientists are seeking to be able to turn nuclear fuel into a weapon within months rather than a year or more, the report said citing intelligence collected in the last months of the Biden administration.

The report cited US officials as saying Washington still believes that Iran and its Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei had not made a decision to develop a weapon.

In December, White House National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan said the Biden administration was concerned that a weakened Iran could build a nuclear weapon and that he was briefing President-elect Donald Trump's team on the risk.

The Biden administration's intelligence assessment has been relayed to Trump’s national security team during the transition of power, the New York Times added.

The report was released as the relatively moderate president of Iran, Masoud Pezeshkian, has publicly expressed willingness to re-engage with the United States in talks over its nuclear program, which it says is for peaceful purposes.

Setbacks dealt to Iran and its regional allies in a 15-month conflict with Israel and the inability of Iranian missiles to pierce US and Israeli air defenses, the New York Times reported, galvanized Iran to to seek new ways to deter its adversaries.

On January 10, then-CIA Director William Burns suggested that Iran’s weakened strategic position marked by regional setbacks could open the door to renewed nuclear negotiations.

"That sense of weakness could also theoretically create a possibility for serious negotiations," Burns said in an interview with NPR, referencing his experience with secret talks involving Tehran more than a decade ago.

Last month, Trump, Biden and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu all described Iran as weakened, citing Tehran's reduced influence following the fall of its ally Bashar al-Assad in Syria, Israeli attacks on its air defenses and the killing of leaders of its armed Palestinian and Lebanese allies.

However, Iran's Supreme Leader denied his country's power has been undermined. "That delusional fantasist claimed that Iran has been weakened. The future will reveal who has truly been weakened."