Save the Children demands UN condemn Iran for abuses

Iranian students, some without headscarves, shout “Death to the dictator” as they march in central Tehran. (File/AFP)
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Updated 22 November 2022
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Save the Children demands UN condemn Iran for abuses

  • Human rights group calls for independent investigative mechanism into Iran’s mass detention of children
  • UN estimates at least 40 children killed, 1,000 arrested by Tehran regime since Sept. 16

LONDON: Human rights group Save the Children has called for a meeting of the UN Human Rights Council to address growing reports of serious abuses committed against minors by the ruling regime in Iran.

The organization said the UN needed to demand the government release “hundreds of children detained during protests,” adding that many more had been killed or injured following the outbreak of demonstrations throughout the country in September.

The UN revealed that at least 40 children had died in violence following the killing of 22-year-old Kurdish woman Mahsa Amini at the hands of the country’s morality police on Sept. 16.

It also said that as many as 1,000 children had been detained by the Iranian authorities, including some arrested at their schools. More than 14,000 Iranians have been taken into custody during the unrest, including lawyers, journalists, and students.

Save the Children, which has set a target of 2030 by which to “ensure that violence against children is no longer tolerated,” also called on the UN to establish an independent investigative mechanism into human rights violations against children by the Iranian authorities at a special meeting of the Human Rights Council on Nov. 24.

Inger Ashing, chief executive officer of Save the Children International, said: “Children should never be targeted for exercising their rights to freedom of expression and to peaceful assembly. They should not be subjected to this kind of violence and fear or be locked up away from their families for just simply speaking up.

“This violence must stop immediately, and children must be released from detention.

“Iran ratified the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child that states that the arrest, detention, or imprisonment of children shall be used only as a measure of last resort and for the shortest appropriate period of time.

“It also states that children must also be treated with respect and care and be able to keep in contact with their family. This is one of the core UN human rights treaties and must be upheld,” she added.


We need ‘reformist’ president, Rouhani tells Iran

Updated 7 sec ago
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We need ‘reformist’ president, Rouhani tells Iran

  • The former president said Masoud Pezeshkian was one candidate who could "remove the shadow of sanctions”
  • Iran set a snap presidential election on June 28 to replace Ebrahim Raisi, who died in a helicopter crash last month

JEDDAH: Former President Hassan Rouhani on Wednesday urged Iranians to vote for the only “reformist” candidate in Friday’s snap presidential election to replace the late Ebrahim Raisi.

Masoud Pezeshkian could “remove the shadow of sanctions” that have battered the Iranian economy, Rouhani said, praising Pezeshkian’s “honesty and loyalty.”

Other leading “reformist” figures such as former President Mohammad Khatami and former Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif have also endorsed Pezeshkian’s candidacy. The vote on Friday was an opportunity for change, Khatami said.

Pezeshkian, 69, a heart surgeon, has represented the northwestern city of Tabriz in parliament since 2008. He is one of three front runners in the election, along with hard-line parliamentary Speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf and ultraconservative former nuclear negotiator Saeed Jalili.

But analysts say his candidacy has been allowed to proceed only in an effort to increase voter turnout, which authorities fear may be embarrassingly low, and he will be defeated by a more traditional hard-line candidate.

The others in the running are Tehran Mayor Alireza Zakani, cleric Mostafa Pourmohammadi, and Vice President Amirhossein Ghazizadeh-Hashemi, head of the Martyrs’ Foundation.

Iran set a snap presidential election on June 28 following the sudden death of President Ebrahim Raisi, who died in a helicopter crash on May 19, 2024.

Raisi succeeded Hassan Rouhani, who served as the seventh president of Iran from 2013 to 2021. 


Iraq’s Kurdistan to go to polls on Oct. 20

Updated 29 min 37 sec ago
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Iraq’s Kurdistan to go to polls on Oct. 20

IRBIL: Parliamentary elections in Iraq’s autonomous Kurdistan region will be held on Oct. 20, the regional presidency announced Wednesday, after delays and political quarrels repeatedly pushed back the vote.

The elections to pick the 100 representatives in the northern region’s legislature were initially scheduled for October 2022, and were last due to be held earlier this month, which did not happen.

“The parliamentary elections in Iraq’s Kurdistan will be held on Oct. 20,” said a decree from regional President Nechirvan Barzani, read by his spokesman Dilshad Shahab in a televised statement.

In February, the federal court issued a ruling to reduce the number of seats in the Kurdish parliament from 111 to 100, effectively eliminating a quota reserved for Turkmen and Christian minorities. The decision sparked the ire of the Kurdistan Democratic Party, one of the region’s two historic parties which holds key positions of power.


US still keeping pause on one munitions shipment for Israel

US Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin (R) meets with Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant (L) at the Pentagon on June 25, 2024.
Updated 22 min 23 sec ago
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US still keeping pause on one munitions shipment for Israel

  • The official said the two governments remain in discussions about the single shipment of heavy bombs

WASHINGTON: Senior US officials told visiting Israel Defense Minister Yoav Gallant on Wednesday that the United States is maintaining a pause on a shipment of heavy munitions for Israel while the issue is under review, a top US official has said.
The official, briefing reporters about White House national security adviser Jake Sullivan’s meeting with Gallant, said the two governments remain in discussions about the single shipment of heavy bombs, which was paused by President Joe Biden in early May over concerns the weapons could cause more Palestinian deaths in Gaza.

Gallant was wrapping up a visit to discuss the next phase of the Gaza war against Hamas, escalating hostilities with Hezbollah fighters on the border with Lebanon that have spurred fears of a wider conflict and shared US-Israeli concerns about Iran’s nuclear program.
He has also sought to cool tensions between the US and close ally Israel following Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s claims that Washington was withholding weapons, prompting US officials to express disappointment and confusion over the Israeli leader’s remarks.


Scorching summer traps people of Sudan between conflict and deadly heat

Updated 26 June 2024
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Scorching summer traps people of Sudan between conflict and deadly heat

  • Dozens attempting to illegally cross the border into Egypt have died amid a severe summer heatwave
  • Worsening climatic conditions may be placing millions at risk of food insecurity and, consequently, malnutrition

LONDON: Desperate to escape the violence raging across Sudan, thousands of people are setting off on the perilous journey to neighboring states. On the way, however, many are confronted by another hazard — deadly heat.

Dozens of people attempting to illegally cross the border into Egypt have died as the region reels from a severe summer heatwave. Earlier this month, temperatures in Egypt’s southern governorate of Aswan rose to a record 49.6 degrees Celsius in the shade.

The Refugee Platform, an independent Egyptian rights organization, said on June 17 that Aswan locals had found vehicles on remote desert roads filled with the bodies of migrants who had perished.

About 500,000 people from Sudan have fled to Egypt alone since the beginning of the conflict. (AFP)

It reported that 51 people died, presumably on their way to Egypt, as a result of dehydration, heat stroke or road accidents, compounded by lack of medical care. Survivors hospitalized in Aswan informed the Refugee Platform that the number of missing migrants exceeds those who have been found.

Many families have reported their loved ones missing. “My aunt lost contact with her 34-year-old son for two weeks earlier this month, only to later hear from a friend who had reached Egypt that he died of heat stroke before they crossed the border,” said Manal, a UK-based Sudanese nurse, whose name has been changed to protect her anonymity.

She told Arab News that her cousin, who was uprooted from his home in the capital Khartoum, had previously sent his mother, wife and their five-year-old son to Egypt when Sudanese women and minors were exempt from visa requirements.

The conflict between the Sudanese Armed Forces and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces, which erupted on April 15 last year, has displaced 9.1 million people, with 2.1 million having fled abroad, according to UN figures.

According to the International Organization for Migration, about 500,000 people from Sudan have fled to Egypt alone since the beginning of the conflict.

This year's Global Peace Index, produced by the Sydney-headquartered Institute for Economics and Peace, classified Sudan as the second least peaceful country in the world, preceded only by Yemen.

Before its descent into horror, Sudan was Africa’s second-largest refugee host, accommodating over 1 million refugees from Syria, Ethiopia, South Sudan, Eritrea, the Central African Republic, Chad and Yemen.

Today, Sudanese refugees form the largest exile community in Egypt, with more than 300,000 registered with the UN Refugee Agency, UNHCR, in the neighboring country.

Many families have reported their loved ones missing. (AFP)

Nairobi-based World Food Program communications officer Alessandro Abbonizio described Sudan’s refugee crisis as “the world’s largest displacement crisis,” with hundreds of thousands of Sudanese people also fleeing to other neighboring countries, including Chad and South Sudan.

He said that while the WFP “has mobilized massive responses” in neighboring countries to support families fleeing Sudan, many of these nations already grapple with “high levels of food insecurity.”

“The arrival of Sudanese refugees in those countries is stretching WFP’s already underfunded refugee and humanitarian operations across the region,” he told Arab News. “In South Sudan, WFP has already had to reduce humanitarian assistance, and vulnerable families are only receiving half rations.”

An estimated 7.1 million people in South Sudan already face acute or worse food insecurity, as per UN figures, with the number of those facing starvation and death projected to almost double between April and July 2024, compared with the same period last year.

Abbonizio pointed out that thousands of people from Sudan continue to cross the border into South Sudan every week, adding that “families are arriving with stories of long journeys with little food or water and citing violence and lack of food as the main reasons that they left Sudan.”

South Sudan too has been experiencing extreme heat since March when authorities ordered schools to shut across the country. The country, which gained independence from Sudan in 2011, is highly exposed to climatic events such as droughts, floods and rising temperatures, which have led to further displacement, food insecurity and religious and ethnic unrest.

In Chad, “piecemeal funding has forced WFP to operate month-by-month, falling short of meeting the needs of refugees (including those from Sudan) and crisis-affected host communities,” Abbonizio said.

In the absence of preventive measures, worsening climatic conditions spell doom for the region, placing millions at greater risk of food insecurity and, consequently, malnutrition.

Long waiting times and lack of basic amenities at the Sudan-Egypt border are pushing increasing numbers of people in Sudan to take illegal routes into Egypt. (AFP)

A UN Food and Agriculture Organization report cautioned that extreme climatic events “could have major implications for several hotspots, including risk of floods in parts of South Sudan, Somalia, Ethiopia, Haiti, Chad, Mali and Nigeria, as well as Sudan.”

The Hunger Hotspots report, published on June 5, highlighted that “Mali, Palestine, South Sudan and Sudan remain at the highest alert level and require the most urgent attention.”

WFP’s Abbonizio warned that as the rainy season arrives in the coming weeks, access to parts of Eastern Chad will be cut off, potentially worsening the food insecurity crisis in the region.

Noting that 3.4 million people in Chad are projected to face acute food insecurity during the current lean season from June to August, he said: “This year is becoming a race against time as the rainy season is expected to begin in the coming weeks and could cut off access to parts of Eastern Chad.”

INNUMBERS

• 700,000+ Refugees and returnees who have fled from Sudan into South Sudan since April 2023.

• 900,000+ People projected to flee from Sudan into Chad by 2024 end.

• 300,000+ Sudanese refugees registered with UNHCR in Egypt.

Abbonizio called for urgent funding “to preposition food supplies for its refugee response ahead of the start of the rains,” adding that “WFP is also supporting hundreds of thousands of Sudanese refugees in Ethiopia, Uganda and Egypt with food, cash, and nutrition assistance.”

Meanwhile, long waiting times and lack of basic amenities at the Sudan-Egypt border are pushing increasing numbers of people in Sudan to take illegal routes into Egypt in hopes of finding sanctuary.

The conflict has displaced 9.1 million people, with 2.1 million having fled abroad. (AFP)

“Some of the bodies arrived with their skin peeled off and suffering from dehydration,” a medical source at a hospital in Aswan told the Mada Masr news outlet.

Survivors of the ordeal said that “dozens in the desert have no water,” and “entire families died because of the high temperatures and were left there.”

The precise number of people who have died in the process is difficult to ascertain. The Refugee Platform said that, between June 7 and June 9, 40 people, including children, women and entire families, lost their lives. The number is expected to rise as more bodies are uncovered.

In June last year, Cairo announced that all Sudanese people must hold valid visas prior to entering Egypt, scrapping a law that only required Sudanese men aged 16 to 50 to have a visa.

As Egypt has further tightened entry and residency requirements, at least 120,000 people, lacking travel documents, remain in limbo on the Sudan side of the border, according to an AFP news agency report.

Since September, Egyptian authorities have also carried out arrests of Sudanese refugees “based on their migration status.” The decision was made after authorities detected “unlawful activities,” including visa forgery, an Egyptian foreign ministry spokesperson told the Reuters news agency.

Cairo announced that all Sudanese people must hold valid visas prior to entering Egypt. (AFP)

In March, the Sudanese Dabanga Radio cited a thriving trade in forged Egyptian visas at the Argeen border crossing between the two countries.

In a condolence message to the families of those who have died trying to reach Egypt, Abdelgadir Abdallah, Sudan’s consul general in Aswan, warned of the dangers of using irregular means to enter Egypt. “Avoid using this method. Some areas in Sudan are safe; remain there,” he said.


Tunisian soldier dead in attack against patrol: ministry

A Tunisian soldier was shot dead on Wednesday in an attack on an army patrol in a desert area bordering Libya. (File/AFP)
Updated 26 June 2024
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Tunisian soldier dead in attack against patrol: ministry

  • The ministry said it hadn’t identified the shooter, but an investigation has been opened
  • Smugglers have been active in the area while the presence of extremist groups is growing

TUNIS: A Tunisian soldier was shot dead on Wednesday in an attack on an army patrol in a desert area bordering Libya, the country’s defense ministry said.
“At dawn, a military patrol operating in Remada, which was carrying out its normal duties in the border buffer zone, was targeted by sudden fire from an unknown source,” the ministry said in a statement.
Remada is in the far south of the country.
The attack “resulted in the death of a soldier from the military patrol,” it added.
The ministry said it hadn’t identified the shooter, but an investigation has been opened.
Smugglers have been active in the area while the presence of extremist groups is growing.
In 2013, Tunisia established a buffer zone along the border which civilians are not permitted to enter.
Tunisian military forces often carry out operations in mountainous and desert areas along the borders with Libya and Algeria.