As the 55th session of the United Nations Human Rights Council approaches, Human Rights Activists (HRA) in Iran is publishing the redacted version of a submission filed in December to the Independent International Fact-Finding Mission on the Islamic Republic of Iran (FFMI).

Drafted with the legal support of UpRights, the 60-page submission argues that the facts provided to the FFMI by HRA and two trusted partner organizations should lead the FFMI to conclude that crimes against humanity, and in particular persecution on political and gender grounds, have taken place in the Islamic Republic of Iran since at least 16 September 2022.

The redacted version of the submission is presented in five comprehensive parts, first outlining a methodological approach to collecting and verifying information. Then, it contextualises the “Woman, Life, Freedom” protests in the wider discriminatory legal framework against women, girls and LGBTQI+ individuals, detailing the facts surrounding the protests, before providing a legal analysis focusing on the crime against humanity of persecution on gender and political grounds. Finally, it presents the FFMI and UN Member States with recommendations in this respect.

To read more on HRA’s work on shedding light on the situation of human rights in Iran ahead of the FFMI’s report – set to be delivered on March 18th  – see here

UN FFMI submission

On 11 December 2023, Human Rights Activists (HRA) in Iran and UpRights filed a submission before the United Nations Fact-Finding Mission on the Islamic Republic of Iran (FFMI). The submission contends that crimes against humanity, and in particular persecution on political and gender grounds, have taken place in the Islamic Republic of Iran since at least 16 September 2022.

Analysing information collected and verified by HRA and two partner organizations, the submission demonstrates that there are reasonable grounds to believe that the crackdown by the Iranian authorities on the peaceful protests that followed the death of Mahsa Zhina Amini, and other violations related to the protests since September 2022, constitute a widespread and systematic attack against the civilian population. Against the background of the “Woman, Life, Freedom” protests, the submission highlights specific examples of the violence employed by the Iranian government including instances of arbitrary arrest and detention, sexual violence, and murder. It demonstrates that those examples qualify as underlying acts of crimes against humanity and severe deprivations of fundamental rights.

The submission outlines how agents of the Iranian government intended to discriminate against women and girls especially on the basis of gender, with these groups singled out for persecutory treatment including physical and psychological abuse, the use of derogatory language and acts of sexual violence including rape. The submission recognises in this respect that individuals have also been targeted on political grounds. It stresses, however, the intersectional nature of the violations to which women, girls and LGBTQI+ individuals have been specifically subjected by the Iranian authorities for their perceived non-compliance with established gender norms and discriminatory laws and policies.

The submission concludes with recommendations by HRA to the FFMI and the international community to establish accountability for the violations outlined in the submission.

UpRights thanks HRA for the opportunity to contribute to this important issue and in particular analysis of the crime against humanity of persecution on gender grounds. While the entirety of the submission has not been made public at this time, an executive summary of the facts is available here.

UpRights welcomes the publication of the report “The Taliban’s war on women: The crime against humanity of gender persecution in Afghanistan”. The report, jointly published by Amnesty International and the International Commission of Jurists (ICJ), with legal and analytical support from UpRights, details how human rights violations against women and girls under Taliban rule in Afghanistan may amount to crimes against humanity and, in particular, gender persecution.

Following the Taliban’s takeover in August 2021, the human rights of women and girls in Afghanistan have been progressively curtailed, despite initial assurances by the Taliban to uphold their rights. Gradually, the Taliban have implemented a series of policies to oppress and exclude women and girls from society with any meaningful form of public participation now prohibited.

The report details how actions taken by the Taliban’s de facto authorities have actively restricted the human rights of women and girls. These are in direct contravention of rights guaranteed under international human rights treaties to which Afghanistan is a party. Restrictions include: preventing women from moving freely and dressing as they choose; bans on education beyond primary school; exclusion from a wide range of professions, including from working with NGOs and the UN office in Afghanistan, and refusal to grant political appointments or public positions. The de facto Taliban authorities have also suppressed any instance of resistance against these policies through the use of intimidation, persecution, arbitrary detention, enforced disappearance, torture, and other forms of cruel, inhuman, or degrading treatment.

The joint report highlights how the policies adopted by the Taliban severely curtail the human rights of women and girls, including the rights to education and work, and to the freedom of movement, expression, association, and peaceful assembly, as well as the rights to equality and non-discrimination. The new joint report provides an extensive legal assessment suggesting that such human rights violations to which women and girls are subjected can amount to international crimes under international law and in particular to the crime against humanity of gender persecution according to the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court (ICC). Through a detailed legal analysis, to which UpRights provided analytical support, the report also underlines how the incidents of arbitrary arrest and detention, torture and other ill-treatment committed against women and girls accused of so-called “moral offenses” or for their participation in peaceful protests or other exercise of their human rights may further amount to the crimes against humanity of imprisonment, enforced disappearance and torture under Article 7(1) of the Rome Statute

The report covers the period from August 2021 to January 2023 and builds on Amnesty International’s previous investigative report “Death in Slow Motion: Women and Girls Under Taliban Rule”. The important analysis contained in the report would not have been possible without the cooperation between Amnesty International and the ICJ.