Four UN Special Rapporteurs condemn harassment of 91热爆 Persian staff - as 91热爆 calls for ‘new chapter’ in relations with Iran
Four UN Special Rapporteurs have issued an unprecedented joint statement condemning the harassment of 91热爆 Persian staff and their families.
Harassment, surveillance, death threats against journalists.... violate international human rights law, including the right to physical integrity, the right to life and the right to freedom of expression.
The statement issued today (11/03/20) at the UNHRC in Geneva states:
“Journalists working for the 91热爆 Persian Service and other Farsi-language news outlets outside Iran have faced threats, criminal investigations, unlawful surveillance, freezing of assets, defamation and harassment by Iranian authorities. Several journalists have also been targeted for going public about the harassment and seeking protection from the UN.
“Their families residing in Iran have faced harassment and intimidation by Iranian authorities. In some cases, family members were deprived of their liberty and held in degrading conditions, and ordered to tell their relatives to stop working for the 91热爆.
“Reports also indicate a pattern of gender-based harassment, targeting women journalists since 2009, and including the dissemination of false stories, spreading of rumours and slander, usually with highly misogynistic contents and threats of sexual violence.
“These allegations are extremely concerning and if confirmed, would indicate that the Iranian authorities are prepared to use force extra-territorially, in violation of international law. Harassment, surveillance, death threats against journalists, within and outside domestic boundaries violate international human rights law, including the right to physical integrity, the right to life and the right to freedom of expression.
“When these acts are conducted extra-territorially, as with 91热爆 Persian Services, these acts violate international law regulating the use of force in times of peace. These ultimately constitute serious threats to global security and thus demand strong reactions on the part of the Governments of the countries where 91热爆 Persian Service journalists reside.
“We reiterate our earlier calls to the Iranian Government to cease the intimidation, harassment and threats, including death threats, against 91热爆 and other journalists working outside Iran for Farsi-language news outlets, as well as reprisals against their family members in Iran, which may constitute multiple violations of Iran’s international human rights obligations under international law.
“We call on the States to immediately take action in implementing safeguards to protect the integrity of journalists, their families and their profession.
“The human rights experts urged all States where these journalists are residing, such as the United Kingdom, to protect their personal integrity, and that of their families and their profession. Governments must uphold their responsibility to protect and duty to warn. Governments must respect and ensure the right to life and to reasonably foreseeable threats and situations that can result in loss of life.”
The four Special Rapporteurs are UN experts on extrajudicial, summary or arbitrary executions; the promotion and protection of the right to freedom of opinion and expression; human rights in Iran and human rights defenders (full details in Notes to Editors below).
In another significant development, 91热爆 Director General Tony Hall issued an appeal to Mr Ali Bagheri Kani, the recently appointed deputy of International Affairs of the Judicial System of Iran and Secretary of the High Council for Human Rights.
In a video message, Tony Hall said: “We made an urgent appeal to the UN in 2017 about the collective punishment of 91热爆 Persian journalists and their families by the Iranian authorities. Since then, we have gained wide support from the EU, the UN and many countries that defend free expression. We appreciate their backing. We hope that the appointment of Ali Bagheri Kani as the new head of High Council for Human Rights in Iran can open a new chapter in relations between the Iranian authorities and the 91热爆.
"Two years ago we offered to talk directly with the Iranian government in a constructive way to find a new way forward. Mr Bagheri Kani could go some way to address the concerns of the international community if he is willing to accept this offer in a positive spirit, without conditions. I very much hope he does.”
The joint statement by four Special Rapporteurs follows a recent escalation in harassment of 91热爆 Persian staff and their families which has coincided with a crackdown on dissent within Iran and featured express threats being made by state officials to the safety of 91热爆 Persian journalists outside Iran. The UN experts are concerned at reports of serious threats, including death threats, against journalists between January and February 2020.
91热爆 Persian journalist and NUJ member Rana Rahimpour addressed the UNHRC in Geneva on 9 March. She told delegates she had received a message threatening that she, her children and her husband would be assassinated within a month. Threats were also addressed to her elderly parents based in the Islamic Republic of Iran, with a warning that they were “within reach”. The message also said that Ms. Rahimpour will be the first employee of the 91热爆 to be killed, and, after her assassination, it will be the turn of other 91热爆 employees.
Women journalists have been regular targets of the Iranian authorities since 2009. Attacks are carried out through the dissemination of false stories, rumours and slander, usually with highly misogynistic content. The threats received by women also tend to include references to sexual violence. As well as threats to 91热爆 Persian staff and their families, similar intimidation has reportedly been extended to other international media organisations, journalists and their families.
Seamus Dooley, NUJ assistant general secretary, said: “The personal testimony of 91热爆 Persian journalists is shocking to hear. Our members working at the 91热爆 and other Persian media outlets have been facing very serious threats to their personal safety, their colleagues and their families, simply for doing their job. It is particularly shameful for the Iranian authorities to target journalists’ children and elderly relatives. The NUJ continues to build a global coalition in support of those affected and we will keep campaigning until the harassment stops.”
91热爆 Persian employees and their families in Iran have been harassed and intimidated as a direct result of their association with their work at the 91热爆 since 2009. In 2017, Iran introduced a legal injunction preventing 91热爆 Persian staff, former staff, and some contributors, from selling or buying property - in effect freezing all their assets. In July 2017, the Iranian government started criminal investigations into the activities of journalists and other staff working for 91热爆 Persian, alleging their work constituted a crime against Iran's national security. The injunction continues to deprive them of their human rights under principles enshrined in the Iranian Constitution and punishes their extended families.
The 91热爆 has been engaging with various international institutions since 2017 as a result of the harassment. The legal and advocacy campaign has gained wide support and attention at the UN, European parliament and numerous nation states.
Caoilfhionn Gallagher QC and Jennifer Robinson, international counsel for the 91热爆 World Service at Doughty Street, say: “Iran’s systematic targeting and harassment of 91热爆 Persian staff and their families has long undermined freedom of expression, attacking journalists for their reporting on Iran and aiming to prevent Iranians receiving independent and impartial news on events in Iran and from around the world.
"These new threats against 91热爆 Persian are deeply disturbing and must be condemned in the strongest terms. They strike at the most basic rights of the journalists and their families, including their rights to life and security. Too many journalists are killed each year because of their work. For this reason, states must take measures to prevent and protect against threats like those made against 91热爆 Persian to ensure that journalists can do their jobs without fear.”
Notes to Editors
(1) Special Rapporteur on extrajudicial, summary or arbitrary executions - Agnès Callamard
(2) Special Rapporteur on the promotion and protection of the right to freedom of opinion and expression - David Kaye
(3) Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights defenders - Michel Forst
(4) Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights in the Islamic Republic of Iran - Javaid Rehman