Iran: Concerns Over Barring of Women Presidential Candidates
Iran: UN Experts Concerned At Barring of Women Presidential Candidates and Freedom Restrictions
GENEVA (29 May 2013) – A group of United Nations independent human rights experts today warned that unreasonable limitations placed on the right of Iranian citizens to stand for Presidential office, discrimination against women candidates for elections and ongoing restrictions on freedoms of expression, association and peaceful assembly, constitute a serious violations of rights guaranteed by international law.
On 21 May, the Guardian Council, a 12-member body of theologians and jurists, which vets presidential candidates, approved only 8 individuals out of the 686 people registered as candidates for the June 14 presidential elections. Several key political figures and all the 30 female candidates were disqualified, raising serious concerns about the fairness and transparency of the vetting procedures.
Several candidates were apparently excluded on the basis of their affiliation with the 2009 post-election protests and their exercise of fundamental human rights, including the rights to freedom of expression, assembly and association.
“This mass disqualification including that of women wishing to stand in the presidential elections is discriminatory and violates fundamental right to political participation, and run contrary to the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights*, which Iran has ratified,” said the Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights in Iran, Ahmed Shaheed.
“Any
restrictions on this right must be based on objective and
reasonable criteria without distinction of any kind,
including race, gender, religion, and political or other
opinion,” he noted, recalling that well ahead of the
approval of the final list of candidates, a member of the
Guardian Council said that Iranian law does not approve of a
woman in the presidency.
“The International Covenant
does not impose any particular electoral system, but it must
be compatible with the rights protected by Article 25 and
must guarantee and give effect to the free expression of the
will of the electors,” Mr. Shaheed underscored.
Human
rights expert Kamala Chandrakirana, who currently heads the
UN Working Group on Discrimination against Women, added that
excluding women from eligibility for this top political
decision making position is the height of discrimination and
is contrary to articles 2 and 3 of the Covenant which
requires the rights to be recognised without distinction of
any kind, including sex, and to ensure that they are enjoyed
equally by women. “This will exacerbate their already
existing severe underrepresentation in public, political and
professional life,” she warned.
“The
non-approval of any of the female candidates in Iran is a
violation of international norms and standards,” the UN
Special Rapporteur on violence against women, Rashida
Manjoo, reiterated.
“Ensuring women’s participation
in public affairs, including in the political sphere,
through for example, temporary special measures, is an
indicator that the State is applying due diligence to ensure
the equality and non-discrimination rights of women,” she
said. “Ensuring access to the public sphere and also
measures to eradicate all forms of violence against women is
an imperative that cannot be abrogated.”
The UN
Special Rapporteur on freedom of expression, Frank La Rue,
urged the Government of Iran to release all the detained
journalists and to open space for them to effectively and
independently write without fear of persecution, arrest and
intimidation. “Threats to journalists and the constriction
of freedom of expression in different media during electoral
times seriously undermine the inclusiveness and fairness of
the electoral process,” he said.
At least 40 journalists reportedly remain in prison across the country and limitations have been imposed on the freedom of expression and opinion, which could stifle critical news coverage of the elections. There are also reports that the internet has been virtually shut-down, sending of text messages has sporadically been blocked and reformist or opposition websites being censored.
“The credibility of
the presidential elections will not be determined solely on
the day of the vote, but on the basis of the entire process
leading up to and following Election Day,” Mr. La Rue
stressed. “The Government should ensure the release of all
journalists currently detained in prison and should allow
media activists to report freely.”
The UN
Special Rapporteur on freedoms of peaceful assembly and
association, Maina Kiai, called again on the Iranian
authorities to release immediately the main two opposition
leaders, Mehdi Karoubi and Mir Hossein Mousavi, who have
been under house arrest since February 2011, along with
hundreds of other prisoners of conscience who remain in
prison for peacefully exercising their rights to freedoms of
opinion, expression, association and peaceful assembly.
“Freedoms of expression, peaceful assembly and association are essential rights for the effective exercise of political participation and must be fully protected,” the experts concluded.
(*) Check the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights: http://www2.ohchr.org/english/law/ccpr.htm
ENDS