Thank you, distinguished Chair and committee members. I'm very pleased to be here this afternoon, to be able to speak to you about my work for the United Nations on human rights in Iran.
As you may be aware, I have just come from New York where I have given my report to the assembly's third committee on my findings from the past year. My report highlights a number of concerns that I have with regard to what I see as a worsening situation of human rights in the country. I highlight a number of these elements that constitute that assessment, the primary of which is the surge in executions in the country over the past 12 months. I have noted since June last year a total of 852 executions, of which 800 took place in the 12 months preceding my report's presentation.
In addition to the sheer number of executions, what concerns me and alarms me is the fact that there appears to be a widening of the scope for which death sentences have been applied. This summer we saw a political prisoner executed. A person, merely for making a donation to a foreign news organization, was put to death.
I have also noted that economic crimes are now used for a capital penalty as well.
Even more alarming than this is the fact that I've noted eight journalists being executed over the past 12 months. That's a very high jump compared to previous figures, which hovered around one over two years. It's a very serious escalation in the use of the death penalty in journalist executions.
I also noted in my report my ongoing concerns about the serious situation with regard to civil liberties in the country. The space for journalists is very limited; there are 35 journalists in prison and that number masks the fact that a revolving door policy actually affects a lot more journalists than that whereby people are brought in, warned, and released, and new people occupy these cells. There are serious limitations on media freedom in the country.
I've also noted my serious concerns about the pushback on human rights in the country. I noted in particular that in education, where Iran had been doing quite well in the past, a policy of gender rationing in access to universities has reduced the number of enrolments of women in the universities from 60% to 48% in just a two-year period.
This is in addition to other disadvantages women face Iran, including the fact that their participation in the labour market is very low at 16% and that gender disparity in income is one of the highest in the Asia Pacific region and that women graduates face three times as much disadvantage in seeking employment. There is now in fact a bill in parliament designed to strengthen the family, but it has as one of its provisions the potential to further undermine women's rights because employers are asked to give priority to married men and to married women and then there is no provision similar to that in that bill that will cause them to hire single women.
I've also noticed with alarm a high incidence and growing incidence of early and forced marriages. Some 48,000 girls were married in the period from March 2013, aged between 10 to15, although girls below 10 are also married with the court's consent. There are a few thousand in that category as well. In a very large number of these marriages, some 99% of cases, these girls bore children before they were 15. It's a very disturbing and alarming trend with regard to the situation of girls and women in the country.
I also noted with alarm the increasing persecution of religious minorities. There are 300 religious practitioners in detention as of my report's submission in August of this year, including 126 Baha’is, who seem to face the worst of the religious-based persecution in the country. This includes the Baha’is' top leadership as well. In addition to that, there are some 49 Christian converts in detention, along with other minority religions like Dervishi, Yarsan, and newer spiritual or faith practitioners.
The alarming fact is that there is high intolerance of religious freedom in Iran.
With regard to labour rights too, I have noted 27 activists in jail for activities such as demanding that their wages be paid promptly, that they be given better wages, and for simply organizing meetings among labour activists.
In terms of positive steps, I do note that attempts have been made over the past 12 months, to perhaps follow up on what President Rouhani had pledged to do at election time. One, of course, was the proclamation of the peoples' rights charter last September, but it is still in process. My concerns were that this charter does not add anything substantial to the rights that already exist in the country, which of course had all the limits I had mentioned.
I also continue to note attempts by the authorities to speak of ending discrimination and other rights, but in substance, I have not witnessed much improvement, including with regard to the human rights defenders in the country. Nasrin Sotoudeh was released from detention last year as part of the new government's reform measures, but as of last week, she had her licence to practise law removed. There's an ongoing situation with regard to human rights defenders. Typically, those who cooperate with human rights mechanisms, those who allege to give information to human rights mechanisms, those who impart information about the country face very serious charges, often national security charges.
Although the picture is very dismal, while there may be voices who may want to address questions of reform, by and large the actions on the ground do not support that there has been a move in that direction. I think the recent acid attacks in Isfahan demonstrate both the plight of women is getting worse and the fact that the discourse on human rights is very limited. The government's actions in this regard have been further disappointing because the actions seem to focus less on identifying the perpetrators than on targeting those who are reporting on this fact. The government appears to be more concerned about knowledge of the attacks rather than the attacks themselves, and that is a matter of concern to me.
To conclude, I also want to point out that I am encouraged by attempts made by the government to cooperate with me, not on a visit to the country, but by engaging with me more widely in Geneva. I am alarmed that there is a worsening of human rights in the country, spearheaded by executions, plus women's rights, and an increasing discourse that vilifies religious minorities.
I shall end there and be very happy to receive any questions that you may have.
Thank you very much.