New Zealand suspends bilateral human rights dialogue with Iran
ANKARA (AA) – New Zealand on Monday announced suspension of its bilateral human rights dialogue with Iran after recent protests.
In a statement, Foreign Affairs Minister Nanaia Mahuta said her country has taken the decision after recent events which showed Iran’s position on human rights is deteriorating, not improving.
“This decision sends a strong signal that bilateral approaches on human rights are no longer tenable with Iran when they are denying basic human rights and violently suppressing protests of those who stand up to them,” Mahuta said.
“New Zealand and Iran established the human rights dialogue in 2018 with the hope of advancing human rights issues and concerns. The first session was held in 2021 and the next one was due to take place later this year,” she added.
Last week, New Zealand also urged its citizens to leave Iran as protests continue throughout the country. A number of foreign nationals have been arrested.
“New Zealand continues to be appalled by the use of force by Iranian authorities in response to peaceful demonstrations following the death of Mahsa Amini last month,” said New Zealand’s top diplomat.
Earlier, Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern also signed an open letter coordinated by a global collective of women, including Michelle Obama, Hillary Clinton, Christine Lagarde and Malala Yousafzai, calling on UN member states to remove Iran from the UN Commission on the Status of Women, according to Mahuta.
Iran has found itself in the midst of mass protests following the death of 22-year-old Mahsa Amini in police custody last month.
Amini died on Sept. 16 under mysterious circumstances after being detained by the morality police in Tehran for allegedly violating Iran’s Islamic dress code.
Iranian officials have said the young woman died of a heart attack she suffered while in custody, but that explanation has fallen flat with protesters and her family who say she was brutally beaten to death.