Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Iran's nuclear crisis: Obama could play the human rights card

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Iran's nuclear crisis: Obama could play the human rights card

    Christian Science Monitor

    Iran's nuclear crisis: Obama could play the human rights card

    One issue that should be put on the table is what Iranian President
    Mahmoud Ahmadinejad put on display this week in New York: Iran's
    religious minorities.

    By Jamsheed K. Choksy and Nina Shea
    from the September 26, 2009 edition

    Bloomington, Ind.; and Washington - Today's announcement by President
    Obama and European leaders that Iran is building a secret underground
    nuclear facility adds fresh urgency to an issue that's been festering
    for years. Tensions will now be considerably higher among negotiators
    at the planned Oct. 1 meeting about Iran's nuclear program.

    Already, there is talk of much-harsher sanctions if Iran does not meet
    international demands in the next two months. "Everything must be put
    on the table now," said French President Nicolas Sarkozy.

    One issue that should be put on the table was displayed by Iranian
    President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad this week in New York: Iran's religious
    minorities.

    Iran's deplorable record on human rights is often treated as separate
    from the nuclear issue. It's not. If Iran's government can't be
    trusted to treat its own citizens with basic dignity, how can it be
    trusted with nuclear technology?

    Mr. Ahmadinejad's theatrics involved including five religious minority
    parliamentarians in his entourage to the UN General Assembly, this
    week. This act shows how eager Tehran is to be accepted back into the
    community of nations. Thus, the human rights card could be
    considerable leverage for Western powers in coming weeks.

    When he addressed the United Nations General Assembly on Sept. 23,
    Ahmadinejad professed concern for "justice, freedom, and human
    rights." He apparently thought his five props would help him project a
    tolerant, peace-loving face. It was a stiff performance.

    Iran is one "big and unified family" with full legal rights for
    religious minorities, he declared when choosing these minority
    representatives, according to official reports. Yet these people could
    not refuse.

    Not o
    uld they be punished if they resisted, their religious communities
    would suffer the hard-line regime's reprisals as well. "Communal
    welfare is important," a well-placed Iranian religious leader
    explained before the New York trip. "So absence will not be possible."

    Iran's Constitution technically grants all citizens freedom of
    worship, sanctity for holy sites, equal standing under the law, and
    access to employment. But the Islamic Republic has destroyed its great
    cultural patrimony and reduced freedoms to unconvincing, exploitative
    acts of propaganda.

    Under the Constitution, the election of these five representatives is
    one of the few rights afforded the four "recognized" religious
    minorities predating Islam in Persia. These minorities live
    essentially as dhimmis, the protected though subjugated "people of the
    Book" of medieval times.

    Since the Islamic revolution of 1979, they have been barred from high
    government office. Their religious ceremonies and celebrations are
    subject to police raids to ensure they abide by "Islamic standards."

    Their synagogues, churches, fire temples, and tombs (including that of
    the prophet Daniel) are frequently defaced with monumental photos of
    ayatollahs and other propaganda. Their schools are administered by
    Iran's Education Ministry, which imposes a state-approved religious
    textbook and typically appoints the principals.

    Any non-Muslim found guilty of a Muslim's death faces capital
    punishment, though the opposite does not hold true. Store owners often
    are compelled to display prominent signs indicating they are najasa or
    ritually unclean. Non-Muslims experience high unemployment at more
    than double the national average of 12.5 percent, especially as they
    are discriminated against in employment by the large state sector.

    Apart from the four heritage religious minorities (Jews, Armenian
    Christians, Assyrian-Chaldean Christians, and Zoroastrians) that are
    allotted parliamentary seats, there are other groups who have even
    fewer rights. Bahais, treated as heretics from Islam, have
    ns. They can be robbed and murdered with impunity since Iranian law
    declares that their blood is mobah or can be spilt. Major Bahai
    shrines have been demolished and the people can assemble only in
    secrecy.

    Religious discrimination and persecution were not always the norm in
    Iran. In the Persian empire of antiquity, Cyrus the Great established
    a policy of religious tolerance. His attitude of acceptance is
    sometimes described as the first charter of human rights.

    Collectively, Iran's non-Muslim communities have dwindled from
    approximately 10 percent of the country's 70 million people to 1979 to
    no more than 2 percent today . Under constant pressures because of
    their religious faiths, they have fled the country since the 1979
    Islamic revolution in far greater proportions than Muslim Iranians.

    Members of Iran's religious minorities and other oppressed groups have
    indicated they expect the US administration to press Ahmadinejad's
    regime into ameliorating their situation. They seek viable, lasting,
    solutions based on implementing the rights that Iran's Constitution
    claims all citizens enjoy.

    If Ahmadinejad's regime meets obligations to its fellow Iranians, then
    it is more likely to fulfill agreements with the international
    community. Transparency and well-being, rather than secrecy and
    aggression ` as reflected yet again by the recently revealed nuclear
    facility ` are necessary in Iran's national and international affairs.

    Ultimately, when free to express their beliefs and ideas, Iran's
    people will be the best guarantors of their nation's fidelity in world
    affairs.

    As Britain, China, France, Germany, the US, and Russia sit down with
    Iran on Oct. 1, they should see Ahmadinejad's posturing for what it is
    and use the meeting to address not only the issue of nuclear strategy,
    but also human rights.

    The current Iranian regime's three-decade-long record of intolerance
    and violence cannot be ignored.

    Jamsheed K. Choksy is a professor of Iranian studies and former
    director of the Middle Eastern Studies Program at I
    niversity and serves as a member of the US National Council on the
    Humanities. Nina Shea directs the Hudson Institute's Center for
    Religious Freedom and serves on the US Commission on International
    Religious Freedom. The views expressed here are their own.
Working...
X