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Iranian female athlete who competed without wearing her hijab

 

Iranian female athlete who competed without wearing her hijab

Watch.. the family home of an Iranian female athlete who competed without wearing her hijab 01:10

Watch.. the family home of an Iranian female athlete who competed without wearing her hijab was demolished


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Atlanta, United States (CNN) -- In an unprecedented move, United Nations member states voted Wednesday to remove Iran from the United Nations' women's rights body over its commitment to policies inconsistent with the rights of women and girls, which have been highlighted amid ongoing protests. In Iran after the death of Mahsa Amini.


Twenty-nine members of the United Nations Economic and Social Council voted in favor of a US-proposed resolution to "immediately remove the Islamic Republic of Iran from the Commission on the Status of Women for the remainder of 2022-2026."



Eight member states voted against the resolution, with 16 abstentions.


"Women and activists have appealed to us, the United Nations, for support," US Ambassador to the United Nations Linda Thomas Greenfield said in a statement to the council. "They have made their request loud and clear: to remove Iran from the commission because of the status of women."

Thomas-Greenfield added: "The reason is clear. The Commission is the UN's principal body for the promotion of gender equality and the empowerment of women. It cannot do its important work if it is undermined from within. Iran's membership at this moment is a hideous stain on the Commission's credibility."

Iran denounced the US resolution it proposed as an "illegal request" and said it weakened the rule of law at the United Nations.


Iran's ambassador and permanent representative to the United Nations, Amir Saeed Irvani, said the decision to deport Iran was based on "baseless allegations and fabricated arguments using false narratives," according to the official IRNA news agency, on Wednesday.

“The journey of a thousand lies begins with a single step,” a representative of the Iranian delegation said after the vote, adding in response to the United States that “this journey started by the United States can continue by targeting any other member states not only on women’s rights but any other issues.”


The representative stated that Iran's "efforts to promote and protect women's rights" are driven by the country's "rich culture and well-established constitution," and as such show that Iran is a "progressive society that considers needs, listens to the voices of its women and girls with passion, and strives for a better future for and with its women and girls."


She added, "My delegation condemns any politicization of women's rights and rejects all accusations leveled in particular by the United States and some members of the European Union."

Responding to news of Iran's removal from the body, Louis Charbonneau, UN director of Human Rights Watch, said it was a "welcome step," but said that "today's justified actions by UN member states are a far cry from true accountability for those Those responsible for the deadly violence unleashed by security forces on protesters after the killing of Mahsa Amini, including many women and girls, and for the execution of protesters after hasty and unfair trials.”


"What is needed is urgent, concerted pressure on Iran to end its campaign of violence, credible prosecutions of individuals directly responsible for these appalling human rights abuses, and an end to severe discrimination against women," Charbonneau told CNN.

Iran had just begun a four-year term on the United Nations' 45-member Commission on the Status of Women, which aims to fight for gender equality around the world.

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