Panel Concerned Over Rights in Iran
UNITED NATIONS (AP) -- A U.N. committee adopted a resolution Wednesday
expressing concern over Iran's continuing violation of human rights,
including the use of torture, stoning and amputation.
The U.N. General Assembly's human rights committee also noted Iran's
discrimination against religious minorities, in particular the unabated
pattern of persecution against the Bahai community, including executions.
The resolution called on the Iranian government to ensure that capital
punishment is only imposed for the most serious crimes, and also called
for religious tolerance.
The vote for the resolution was 63-35, with 60 abstentions. The United
States voted for it, and most Middle East countries abstained or voted
against. The resolution, which is not legally binding, now goes to the
full General Assembly for a vote.
Iran's moderate President Mohammad Khatami has talked of "strengthening
freedom of expression and creating a civil society."
But Maurice Copithorne, the U.N. special representative on the situation
of human rights in Iran, told the committee earlier this month there have
been worrying signs that conditions were slipping backward.
He said reformers, political dissidents and commentators were detained
under unacceptable circumstances, and in some cases the individuals have
disappeared.
The resolution also expressed concern at the arbitrary closure of some
publications and persecution of writers and journalists.
© Copyright 1998 The Associated Press
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