Evidence of meeting #140 for Foreign Affairs and International Development in the 42nd Parliament, 1st Session. (The original version is on Parliament’s site, as are the minutes.) The winning word was iranian.

A video is available from Parliament.

On the agenda

MPs speaking

Also speaking

Shirin Ebadi  Founder and Chair, Centre for Supporters of Human Rights
Masih Alinejad  Journalist and Founder of White Wednesdays Movement, As an Individual
Nikahang Kowsar  Iranian Canadian Environmentalist, As an Individual
Richard Ratcliffe  As an Individual

9:35 a.m.

Founder and Chair, Centre for Supporters of Human Rights

Dr. Shirin Ebadi

[Witness spoke in Persian, interpreted as follows:]

I'll speak very briefly. I can tell you that this revolution caused all of the rights women had to be lost. This revolution has been called the revolution of men against women, because all rules against women were passed during this regime.

Only four months after the revolution, before the constitution was passed, and when parliament was being controlled by the revolutionary council, they passed their first law. Do you know what it was? They passed a law that a man can marry four women. At the same time, I wrote an article asking, “Did you actually carry out a revolution so you could have four wives?” After that, other laws against women were also passed, and women were held back in all areas.

Because time is short, if you'll agree, when the next question is asked, please let one of us answer. There is limited time, and we don't want to leave anything out.

9:35 a.m.

Liberal

The Chair Liberal Michael Levitt

Thank you.

We're now going to move to MP Caron, please.

9:35 a.m.

NDP

Guy Caron NDP Rimouski-Neigette—Témiscouata—Les Basques, QC

Thank you, Mr. Chair.

Thank you very much, Ms. Alinejad and Ms. Ebadi, for your very compelling statements and testimony.

I'll start with Ms. Ebadi.

You said that Canada happens to be a country that facilitates the laundering of money from Iran and Iranians.

I tend to agree with you since, as recently as February 2019, the RCMP dismantled a money laundering network in Canada and made arrests. This case involved 17 people, so 17 arrests, and resulted in the seizure of $33 million.

This is indeed an issue. The Standing Committee on Finance studied the issue of money laundering. It recognized that Canada had very weak provisions in place to effectively review the flow of illicit money from Iran or other countries. The committee also recognized that the main agencies such as FINTRAC, the Canada Revenue Agency or the RCMP work in isolation.

You seem to know the subject. In your opinion, how serious is the problem with the flow of illicit money from Iran into Canada for laundering purposes?

In addition, the government seems to want to strengthen its anti-money laundering provisions by creating an agency that would consolidate some aspects of the three groups mentioned earlier. What would you recommend with regard to the creation of this new anti-money laundering agency in Canada and the work that it should accomplish?

9:35 a.m.

Founder and Chair, Centre for Supporters of Human Rights

Dr. Shirin Ebadi

[Witness spoke in Persian, interpreted as follows:]

The behaviour of this agency must be such that the source of the money is completely clear. Corrupt people in Iran, who steal money from Iran and bring it to Canada do not actually put it in their own name. It's usually in the name of their spouses or their children. When you realize that a young 30-year-old man is bringing in several million dollars of wealth and his father is a citizen of Iran, and he himself has dual citizenship in Iran and Canada, you could easily ask the young man how he made that amount of money, and what his business is in Iran. To discover the truth is not difficult.

Also, Iranians who live in Canada and defend human rights can provide the names of people they recognize. They can provide these names to you and the Government of Canada, and ask for the property of these people and their families to be investigated, so that the source of this wealth can be determined. If some of these corrupt people are limited, and their unclean money is confiscated, then it will be a smaller world for thieves and corrupt people. People who commit these acts should have their property confiscated.

9:40 a.m.

NDP

Guy Caron NDP Rimouski-Neigette—Témiscouata—Les Basques, QC

Thank you.

You're currently in London. We know what's happening with the American sanctions and the United States' withdrawal from the nuclear agreement with Iran. These sanctions have severely affected the people of Iran. Great Britain, Germany and France decided to establish a type of mechanism called Instex. The goal of the mechanism is to facilitate trade with Iran in the form of a barter system. The United States says that this mechanism will facilitate money laundering and that it doesn't provide enough protection to prevent illicit money from leaving Iran and entering these three countries.

What's your opinion on this? Is this situation being discussed, for example in Great Britain?

If Great Britain agrees with the United States, what remedies is it proposing?

9:40 a.m.

Founder and Chair, Centre for Supporters of Human Rights

Dr. Shirin Ebadi

[Witness spoke in Persian, interpreted as follows:]

Bartering must be limited to food and medication—what people can benefit from directly. Also, when signing any contracts, you could include a condition for overseeing how it's carried out. The government cannot take advantage of these deals and turn them into weapons that are sent to Lebanon, or Bashar al-Assad in Syria.

9:40 a.m.

Liberal

The Chair Liberal Michael Levitt

Thank you.

We have time for a last, short question. I'm actually going to take that time myself.

Ms. Alinejad and Dr. Ebadi, we've seen the situation for human rights in Iran getting worse over the last number of years. Rates of executions are up. Rates of persecution are up, and this applies to women, religious minorities, such as the Baha'i, and the LGBTQ population in Iran. We're seeing a deterioration, and an increase in the brutality and repression of this regime.

I'm wondering if you can leave us with a message for parliamentarians in Canada and parliamentarians in other countries of what the reality is for the people of Iran, very separate from this brutal regime. What do the people of Iran need from us?

Ms. Alinejad, do you want to start?

9:40 a.m.

Journalist and Founder of White Wednesdays Movement, As an Individual

Masih Alinejad

I'll leave it to Dr. Ebadi.

9:40 a.m.

Founder and Chair, Centre for Supporters of Human Rights

Dr. Shirin Ebadi

[Witness spoke in Persian, interpreted as follows:]

As I mentioned in my comments before, any commercial or economic relations with Iran must depend on improving the human rights situation. As well, the Iranian government's use of satellite television and radio for propaganda must be stopped, must be shut down, so they understand that violation of human rights is punishable. Methods in the United Nations could be used. The drafting of UN resolutions to condemn Iran must be continued.

9:45 a.m.

Journalist and Founder of White Wednesdays Movement, As an Individual

Masih Alinejad

I want to add to what Ms. Ebadi said about those people who were actually in power before, and stole the money of the Iranian people. They can easily travel to the United States of America and Canada. How ironic that these governments used to brainwash us to say, “Death to America!” Now, all their relatives are in the United States of America enjoying freedom. Even the children of the hostage-takers are in America. Even one of the ministers of Ahmadinejad, who stole money, is in America. He's very well known because of his corruption.

Those people who were in power can easily travel in Canada, but human rights activists get arrested in Iran, or when they escape from Iran, they get stuck in Turkey. It's obvious that you can help, and you can do a lot. Take action. Sanction the oppressors and help human rights fighters who risk their lives and their families' lives. They don't have the same freedoms as these people who are coming to the west and enjoying freedom.

That's it. Thank you so much.

9:45 a.m.

Liberal

The Chair Liberal Michael Levitt

Thanks to you both for being here and providing such important testimony as we begin our Iran Accountability Week in the Canadian Parliament. Parliamentarians and Canadians stand with the Iranian people in fighting this oppression.

We're going to suspend for a couple of minutes while we get our second panel in place.

9:50 a.m.

Liberal

The Chair Liberal Michael Levitt

The meeting has resumed.

We now have our second panel of witnesses for Iran Accountability Week.

I would like to welcome Nikahang Kowsar, an Iranian journalist, cartoonist and geologist now living in Canada, following his arrest for his work in Iran. He is the co-founder of the Cartoonists Rights Network of Canada.

Also before us today is Richard Ratcliffe, an individual I had the honour of meeting at the recent Geneva conference on human rights. He is the husband of Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe, a British Iranian dual national who has been detained in Iran since April 2016 and sentenced to five years in prison on espionage charges. Their daughter, Gabriella, has been unable to leave Iran since then as well, and Richard has not seen her in a number of years.

Gentlemen, thank you for appearing before us today as we continue our Iran Accountability Week.

Mr. Kowsar, you may begin with your statement, after which we will move to Mr. Ratcliffe. Then we will open up the floor to members who I'm sure are going to have questions for you both.

Please begin, Mr. Kowsar.

May 9th, 2019 / 9:50 a.m.

Nikahang Kowsar Iranian Canadian Environmentalist, As an Individual

Thank you very much.

Mr. Chairman and honourable members of the Standing Committee on Foreign Affairs and International Development and the Subcommittee on International Human Rights, it is an honour and privilege for me as an Iranian Canadian to address this body on the matter of environmental accountability in Iran with a focus on water and, as a matter of fact, the lack thereof.

Based on the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, the human right to water entitles everyone to sufficient, safe, acceptable, physically accessible and affordable water for personal and domestic use.

The Islamic Republic has a long list of harmful activities that have led to the destruction of Iran's water resources, which has also resulted in misery, retrogression, and environmental rollback of the country. Unsustainable projects, such as the construction of more than 650 dams without proper environmental studies, and giving permits for digging 400,000 wells, in addition to shutting an eye on another 430,000 illegal wells, have had major negative effects on surface and groundwater resources all around the country. As a result, millions of struggling farmers have abandoned their farmland and evacuated their villages. This is similar to what occurred in Syria before the civil war.

More than 33,000 villages have been partially or fully evacuated, mostly because of the destruction of water resources needed for farming. In 2013 government officials confirmed that 85% of Iran's groundwater resources were gone. In that year, 12 million Iranians lived in city margins and slums, and in 2018 the number reached 19 million.

On the other hand, the absence of sufficient watershed management plans and projects has proven to have catastrophic effects, especially during the recent devastating floods. Iran is losing more than two billion tons of topsoil, with a value exceeding $70 billion Canadian. Soil erosion is a direct result of the degradation of grasslands and forests, especially during flood seasons.

I should also add the impact of desertification and the evacuation of farmlands. Throughout the recent floods in the western and southwestern provinces of Lorestan, Ilam, Khuzestan, and of Fars and the northern province of Golestan, dozens of innocent Iranians were killed because of murky floods, but mostly because of bad management. More than 10 million Iranians have felt the trauma that could have been managed and substantially contained.

As a water conservationist and journalist who warned former president Mohammad Khatami in 2001 about the policies of his government of building so many dams and transferring water from one basin to another basin, briefing him on the impacts of those projects, I'm sorry to say that after 18 years, what I predicted is happening right now. Iran is a water bankrupt nation. While ignoring the importance of watershed management and maintaining aquifers, they have destroyed everything.

The continuation of those policies, led by a number of former student leaders who occupied the U.S. embassy in 1979 with the help of the revolutionary guards, is destroying the nation. Those student leaders and the revolutionary guards are responsible for so many dams that have blocked rivers and have killed aquifers.

Different government administrations have co-operated with the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, the IRGC, to build major dams and interbasin water transport projects without considering the environmental and social impacts of building these megastructures. As a result of the reckless construction of such dams as Karun 3 on the Karun River, tens of villages have drowned and been evacuated, thousands of hectares of farmland have been destroyed, thousands of years of history and cultural inheritance have disappeared, and tens of thousands of inhabitants have had to migrate to slums and margins of such towns as Izeh.

Until the recent torrential rainfalls, Lake Urmia had lost about 90% of its volume because of the construction of more than 70 dams and depletion of the basin's groundwater and the unsustainable development of farmland in the region. Transfer of water rights of marshes and of farmland to other regions has distressed the people of Isfahan province, where farmers were constantly protesting for over a year. Depletion of groundwater resources has resulted in land subsidence and desertification.

In late 2017 and early 2018, many of the victims of the regime's strategies, including its water policies, had lost their jobs and farms. They joined the nationwide unrest. Since December 2017, protestors who have lost their lives have been from regions and towns such as Dorud, Tuyserkan, Ghahdrijan, Kazerun and Izeh, which have suffered from water scarcity. Loss of annual water supply per person to under 1,000 cubic metres could be translated as a water crisis. Many Iranians are facing that scarcity.

Based on an analysis conducted by the Center for Naval Analyses, with the escalation of water stress, the possibility of civil unrest, instability and violence will significantly rise. Water scarcity and the escalation of violence will not be and cannot be a good sign for promoters of human rights and democratic values, where survival will become the priority in many parts of Iran and millions will have no choice but to flee the country.

Is the world ready for another exodus? In recent years some have had to pay a high price for raising awareness and trying to save the environment. The highest price was paid by Iranian Canadian environmentalist and social scientist Dr. Kavous Seyed-Emami, who was arrested by the security forces of the revolutionary guards and lost his life in solitary confinement under suspicious conditions. Nowadays, a number of his colleagues, including Niloufar Bayani, a graduate of the University of McGill, are under the threat of being sentenced to death for crimes they never committed.

Lack of accountability is the main result of a non-democratic system that has given leeway and impunity to members of the government from different political stripes, as well as the revolutionary guards. Cronyism and corruption go hand in hand, especially in the absence of a free and independent media. I should note that it has been brought to my attention that a number of members of firms and organizations that have partnered with the revolutionary guards and the Islamic regime in destroying Iran's water resources are comfortably residing in Canada, enjoying the wealth of living in a water-rich country, while millions of Iranians are suffering from the consequences of their actions.

I hope this committee as well as other responsible bodies would be willing to actively seek information from former partners of the Islamic regime who have migrated to Canada. Many of these wealthy individuals have happily wired millions to Canada but have closed their eyes to crimes against humanity and their environment. I hope they will come to their senses.

Thank you very much.

9:55 a.m.

Liberal

The Chair Liberal Michael Levitt

Thank you very much, Mr. Kowsar.

Now we will move to Mr. Ratcliffe, please.

9:55 a.m.

Richard Ratcliffe As an Individual

Thank you, Chair. I'm honoured to present to this committee. I'm honoured to be amongst such fellow panellists. I think it's a really important initiative.

I am here to bring these issues a bit closer to home, and to talk about the issue of foreign and dual nationals held prisoner in Iran, including Canadian citizens, and to talk about what the committee and Canada can do for those people.

As the chair said, my name is Richard Ratcliffe. I'm the husband of Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe, a British Iranian charity worker who is currently being held in Evin prison in Iran.

Nazanin's story, as the chair alluded to, started three years ago. She was arrested when on holiday. She was on a family holiday for Iranian new year with our 21-month-old daughter. She was arrested. Our daughter's passport was confiscated. She was put into solitary confinement and sent to an unknown location.

Later on she was accused in the Iranian media of espionage and was convicted for five years on secret charges at a secret trial. At her trial, she was not allowed to speak.

Just before she became eligible for parole, a second court case was opened against her formally blocking her eligibility for parole. This was famously blamed on the words of the then U.K. foreign secretary, Boris Johnson, who had mistakenly said that she was training journalists at the time. That was seized upon by the Iranian judiciary to justify it.

That second court case has been opened and closed periodically. Two days ago it was reopened by the judiciary spokesperson, and we await its verdict.

In reality, Nazanin is being held as diplomatic leverage by the Iranian authorities in a dispute between the U.K. and Iran over some unpaid monies that the U.K. owes Iran over an old arms debt. Most of the strange events in our case, and there have been many, can be related to the dynamics of that dispute. The judiciary spokesperson's words this week make sense because that dispute is back in court again in London later this month.

My point today is not to talk directly about Nazanin's case, but more to point out that Nazanin is not the only one being held. She is one of a number of dual and foreign nationals held in Iran on arbitrary charges. There are over 30 cases since 2014 that are known about. There are obviously others that aren't known because many families choose to keep quiet.

They include a number of current Canadian prisoners. Nazanin used to be a cellmate of a lady called Professor Homa Hoodfar, who has happily been released. Currently, there is a gentleman called Saeed Malekpour who has been in Evin prison for 11 years. As my fellow panellist just mentioned, Kavous Seyed-Emami was held and died in mysterious circumstances in Evin last year. His wife, Maryam Mombeini, is currently being held in Iran and had a national security case opened against her following his death.

Human Rights Watch has documented a systematic targeting of foreign and dual nationals by the Iranian security services, particularly those with links to the outside world, whether they are academics, charity workers, IT workers, or journalists in some cases. They are often framed with opaque national security cases used to justify internal control and then used for external bargaining with the country of their other passport.

A number of people have been picked up while on holiday, some of them very old and some of them young. In Nazanin's case, she was still breastfeeding when she was taken.

Last month a number of the families got together and produced a submission to the UN through the universal periodic review process, which was really their attempt to come together and talk in a common voice.

For me, it was striking just how many common patterns there were in these cases: the secret trials, the refusal of a lawyer, the use of solitary confinement to extract confessions, keeping prisoners incommunicado and away from their families, secluding them from any consular access, the denial of medical treatment as a tool of pressure. There have been quite a few heart attacks, particularly with the older men, and a need for heart surgery; very extensive back problems for many people from sleeping on the floor for many months; almost consistent depression; and often a number of hunger strikes to get access to medical attention. Also, there have been the broadcast of smears on the Iranian state TV; taking private documents and making up stories; an airing of confessions that were extracted while in solitary, often false confessions and often very embittering for the families afterwards; of course, raids on family homes and the taking of family assets; and the use of threats to maintain surveillance.

lt is a nasty business—and it is a business. Two weeks ago foreign minister Zarif was in New York. He was marketing the idea of a prisoner swap. He raised Nazanin's name in relation to it, and then once he had the media's attention, he took the offer away and made it clear that there were different requirements and a different deal was needed for Nazanin.

My agenda here today is to say that there is a protection gap for all of these people that are held in this way. This is a hostage crisis. We do need Canada's help, among other countries, to protect its own citizens and the citizens of other like-minded states and to really enforce some kind of accountability for this kind of hostage-taking.

There is a lack of protection partly because there is a failure to recognize quite what is going on and by treating these individual cases as sort of random and unfair, rather than effectively as an encroaching form of diplomacy.

Also, Iran is special in many ways, but it is worth noting that they're the only country that takes foreign citizens and uses them for leverage. Canada is experiencing that with China currently.

The erosion, it seems to me, of previous norms against state hostage-taking creates more than a protection gap for individual citizens. lt risks allowing a new middle ages of international law, and it is something that should be taken very seriously by all foreign countries and parliaments around the world.

The common frustration for us and the complaint you'll hear from Canadians and the Brits is that not enough is done for our individual families and that our cases can be like flotsam on the seas of bigger political concerns whether they be a nuclear deal or whatever.

1 think for me the issue is one of approach and accountability. That is why this week is very important. I think after three years there needs to be a very clear calling out of hostage-taking and I think Canada can play an important role in this. It has done that in other human rights areas.

There are obviously two specific areas that we are talking about. One is the work at the UN, where Canada plays a very important role with Iran and human rights resolution. It is the leading voice in the universal periodic review process. I think we will be pushing the U.K. to do an Arria-formula meeting at the Security Council. This is not just an issue of human rights. This is also an issue of international peace and security as a norm that's been eroded.

Also—and it's a topic that is part of this seminar—there are the Magnitsky sanctions and the idea of sanctions that are focused on individuals for individual accountability, not some sort of blunt tool of collective punishment, but that are targeted very clearly on the perpetrators of clear abuses.

Speaking personally, rather than on behalf of all the families, I think it's really important to raise the cost of hostage-taking in any way that can be done by Canada, like other like-minded states. In reality, it needs international coordination. We are all for resonance, for effectiveness across jurisdictions. It is often the case in individual cases, and Canada will experience it as well, that you can feel exposed by a lack of solidarity. Actually, it is really important that we are all stronger together.

I think three years have taught me that systematic abuses are rarely solved by euphemisms and not acknowledging what is going on, but through shared values and through accountability for a shared world. The world doesn't have to be this way.

If I have time, I'd like to end with a couple of words from Nazanin, just from what what she told me earlier on, that ordinary people are always at the centre of human rights issues. She wrote a letter on the anniversary of her arrest, stating:

Do you remember the time that I was proud of my country and used to tell your family and friends about every little detail? Do you remember that I used to insist on going to Iran each year to spend Nowrouz? I will never ask you that again. This isn't what I was trying to teach about my country to you and your family.

The first nine months of last year were spent because of an uncommitted crime, in various solitary cells. Many days during which I believed that I would never see you again. Every day and every second I would submerge more and more in an ocean of doubt, fear, threat, loneliness and more than anything mistrust.

No one would see me scream for my two year old daughter who wasn't in my arms.

But hold my hands, let us finish this chapter. We shall overcome this pain. Today freedom has got one day doser.

Thank you, all, for being here today.

10:05 a.m.

Liberal

The Chair Liberal Michael Levitt

Thank you very much, Mr. Ratcliffe.

Thank you, Mr. Kowsar.

We will now move to questions from members.

We are going to begin with MP Anderson, please.

10:05 a.m.

Conservative

David Anderson Conservative Cypress Hills—Grasslands, SK

Thank you, Mr. Chair. I'll share my time with Mr. Aboultaif.

Thank you to both of you for being here today, especially Mr. Ratcliffe. I don't think we can possibly understand what you've gone through, and there are far too many people in the situation you find yourself in.

I don't know if you can actually tell us this, but do you have contact with your wife, or do the families of prisoners who are held have contact, and if so, what is that contact? Can you talk a little about that?

10:05 a.m.

As an Individual

Richard Ratcliffe

Yes is the honest answer, and it varies over time.

Broadly, in our experience, when someone is held in solitary, we have no contact for the first couple of months, which is the really live interrogation period. Thereafter, Nazanin was allowed to call me, which would typically be a very short phone call, with an interrogator standing next to her. It was a very sheltered type of sharing of information, but at least we'd know she was alive.

Evin prison, which is the main prison in Iran, is controlled in different parts by different bodies. The interrogation part, controlled by the revolutionary guard, is pretty terrifying, with very controlled communications. After Nazanin was convicted and after our appeal, she was moved to the regular ward, so she's now one of the women's ward prisoners with some very inspiring women.

There's a rota to when you get phone calls. I can't ever call her, but she can call me. All the phone calls are recorded, but it's not quite so....

In most of the cases, certainly the Canadian cases, anyway, they are now in that situation. They're able to have phone calls once or twice a week, normally enough to know what the news is. A 10-minute call is not necessarily great when someone is despairing. You know how someone feels, but you can't really do anything about it.

Some of toughest parts in the whole process are probably Nazanin despairing on the other end of the phone and me not being able to be there. I can be a campaigning husband, so I can take information and use it in the media and use it in part, but to be a real husband and just listen to her, not really.

10:10 a.m.

Conservative

David Anderson Conservative Cypress Hills—Grasslands, SK

Thank you.

Your wife was working for a charity when she was arrested. The NGOs have had trouble in Iran. I wonder if you have knowledge or if you can talk to us a bit to us this morning about the religious minorities and the pressure they face as well. We've talked about women, about prisoners, about some of the impacts on men, or whatever, but the Baha'í in particular are a group that has been targeted. Do you have any information on that, that you could share with us?

10:10 a.m.

As an Individual

Richard Ratcliffe

Not facts, but yes, there are obviously quite a few Baha'í women in the cells with Nazanin, some really inspiring and uplifting people. There were a number of Baha'í women released just recently. They were very lovely, calming influences. The ward is a bit more fractious now, since they've left, which is a terrible thing to admit.

Most of the Baha'í women who are in the cells with Nazanin were arrested for being involved in educational activities. It is illegal for Baha'ís to go to Iranian universities. They have set up their own educational activities and some of them have been punished for it. They are remarkably resilient and impressive people.

10:10 a.m.

Conservative

David Anderson Conservative Cypress Hills—Grasslands, SK

Thank you.

I'll turn my time over.

10:10 a.m.

Conservative

Ziad Aboultaif Conservative Edmonton Manning, AB

Thank you both for appearing this morning.

Mr. Kowsar, you highlighted an area: the water crisis in the country. I know this is a regime that is very pragmatic outside Iran and very corrupted inside Iran. Now 33,000 villages out of 64,000, or more than half, have been partially or fully evacuated.

The corruption is there on one side, on the economic side, but on the political side, do you believe these villages could belong to certain minorities in Iran that have no rights whatsoever?

For example, I am aware that in the Al-Ahwaz region, there are over 17 million people who don't even have the right to have proper schooling. Would you be able to detail or highlight in regard to those minorities what they're suffering because of this?

10:10 a.m.

Iranian Canadian Environmentalist, As an Individual

Nikahang Kowsar

There have been so many villages in marginal provinces and near the Iranian border with Pakistan, Afghanistan and Iraq that have been evacuated for different reasons. One is water, which I'm mostly concerned about, but also, they are mostly from the Sunni minority as well. Therefore, it's ethnic and also religious over there.

Those minorities have been deprived of their rights and the government has not helped them or has created a situation where they had no options but to leave. That is what I have studied in the last few years.

10:10 a.m.

Conservative

Ziad Aboultaif Conservative Edmonton Manning, AB

Would you be able to preface also the state of the Kurds in Iran?

10:10 a.m.

Iranian Canadian Environmentalist, As an Individual

Nikahang Kowsar

Many of the Kurds in various provinces, such as Kurdistan, Kermanshah or western Azerbaijan in the northwestern part of the country, are suffering from discrimination. Also, some of their water rights are being stolen from them. It's a fact that since the beginning of the revolution many Kurds have lost their lives to the revolutionary guards. Many activists have been imprisoned by the revolutionary guards and the regime and by the government as well. The ministry of intelligence is a main source of pressure on many Kurds. The economy is going down in many parts of the Kurdish regions, and there's no accountability on the government's side for the situation of Kurds in Iran.