To go back to your last question, yes, as I said, how many of those people who have been executed belonged to the ethnic minorities, the national minorities?
I have a report by a credible human rights organization listing all the political prisoners in Iran. There are about 520--known, at least; I mean, this is just known. I can assure you that 90% of those belong to ethnic minorities, with at least 70% of these prisoners being Kurdish. That's just the people who have been indicted or somehow been given a sentence of a year or six months. Usually it's not six months, because they don't count six months. By some sort international norms, usually 24-hour detention is legal. But in Iran, usually six months and nine months are really the normal periods to be detained in Iran. In Iran and Kurdistan, it's even worse. Sometimes people have actually disappeared for 12 months. When they come back, they don't even know who they are.
To answer your question, yes, most of those who have been executed are mostly from ethnic minorities.
For juveniles, mostly the executions have to do with offences, maybe criminal offences in the sense that they've killed someone. Usually it has to do with this. They don't really discriminate in that regard. Usually they execute anyone who has maybe killed someone in their early childhood.
In that regard, there have been instances where they are Kurds also, but mostly it's just the nature of the regime that tries to defy the international rights of the child agreement. They're signatory to it, and they're not allowed to execute people who have committed a crime in their childhood.
As to whether this is an act of genocide, I think there are a lot of grounds to call what's going on in Iran an act of genocide. As I said, 50,000 innocent Iranian Kurdish people have died in Iran since the Iranian revolution, which could set a precedent for some sort of genocidal procedures or some genocidal act.
As I said, the negligence right now in terms of removing mines--