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"To improve is to change; to be perfect is to change often": United Nations removes Iran from Women Rights Panel drawing applause from Iranian dissidents who are seeking to depose the hardline regime following murder of Mahsa Amini for not wearing hijab

Iran Booted From UN Women’s Rights Panel
 |  Satyaagrah  |  Islam
UN removes Islamic Republic of Iran from women’s rights panel
UN removes Islamic Republic of Iran from women’s rights panel

People are celebrating this, and that’s fine, but remember: the Islamic Republic of Iran didn’t just start oppressing women a few months ago. The Islamic Republic of Iran has always oppressed women.

It was oppressing women when it was put on this women’s rights committee in the first place. So don’t start assuming that the UN has become sane. It hasn’t. It’s just bowing to public outrage.

It will turn around and call for laws against “Islamophobia” again tomorrow, despite the fact that everything the Islamic Republic of Iran does to women is based on Islamic law.

Iran Booted From UN Women’s Rights Panel

The United Nations voted on Wednesday to remove Iran from its place on a women’s rights committee, drawing applause from Iranian dissidents who are seeking to depose the hardline regime following its murder of a 22-year-old woman who improperly wore her head covering.

The United States led the charge to see Iran booted from the U.N.’s Commission on the Status of Women, where it has served since 2019 even though it is one of the world’s foremost human rights abusers. The United States draft resolution was passed after 29 countries voted in favor, with 8 against and 16 abstentions.

Iran’s role on the women’s committee was challenged from the very start by opponents of the hardline regime who cited its record of oppressing and killing women. In light of an ongoing protest movement in Iran fueled by the regime’s abuse of women and girls, the U.N. signaled that international outrage was too great to let Tehran remain on the commission, which works to empower women and create gender parity.

Linda Thomas-Greenfield, the U.S. ambassador to the U.N., described Iran’s presence on the committee as an “ugly stain on the commission’s credibility,” according to Reuters. Iran’s U.N. ambassador described the vote as illegal and called the United States a bully for leading the charge.

White House national security adviser Jake Sullivan said the vote “is another sign of the growing international consensus on Iran and demands for accountability.” The United States, he said, “is working with our allies and partners around the world to hold Iran accountable for the abuses it is committing against its own people, notably peaceful protesters, women, and girls.”

Secretary of State Antony Blinken also described the U.N.’s action as “an unmistakable message of support from around the world to the brave people of Iran, and in particular to Iranian women and girls, who remain undaunted despite the brutality and violence perpetrated against them by the Iranian regime.”…

References: 

jihadwatch.org

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