Canada, to its credit, has been the leader in co-sponsoring the annual resolution at the UN General Assembly on the situation of human rights in Iran. Your references also come out of that resolution, which we co-sponsored. As well, there is a country review of human rights violations, and we have made specific recommendations in that regard, including specific recommendations with regard to the pain and plight of the Bahá'í, which have gone unaddressed and unresolved. That is why I say that you have a situation where Canada, to its credit, makes appropriate, effective, and specific recommendations with regard to improving the human rights situation in Iran and countering the human rights violations in Iran, and Iran responds to that by increasing its human rights violations amidst a culture of impunity.
The time has come for us to begin to sanction those major human rights violators to end that culture of impunity and to say, “Look, we want to engage with Iran, but that engagement cannot be a one-way street where, if we make recommendations, the response is effectively to ignore the recommendations and in fact intensify the violations”. Our engagement is on behalf of the people of Iran, on behalf of the rule of law in Iran, on behalf of an independent judiciary, and on behalf of freely elected leadership in Iran, all of the things we have referenced here.
Again, I want to single out the pain and plight of the Bahá'ís as a litmus test for the situation of human rights in Iran.