The Islamic Regime In Iran After Forty Years Of Bloodshed And Terror
The Islamic Regime In Iran After Forty Years Of Bloodshed And Terror
Forty years ago, mullah Khomeini and his zealous followers, including fanatic religious leaders and communist parties, with the assistance and desire of some foreign governments, regretfully overthrew the late Mohammad Reza Shah Pahlavi, the last in a line of Persian monarchs dating back to Cyrus the Great nearly 2600 years ago, and enforced a stone age Islamic regime. Today, a great majority of Iranian people are fed up with the backward, scowling, corrupt, terrorist, and prejudiced clerics who have robbed their country and have killed their countrymen and women.
For forty years the Islamic regime has systematically ignored the basic human rights of the Iranian people. The regime even restricts citizens’ right to change their local government by voting. The regime also manipulates the electoral system and represses political dissidents such as academics, human rights defenders, environmentalists, journalists, filmmakers, social-media users and bloggers. Systematic abuses include extrajudicial killings and summary executions, disappearances, widespread use of torture and other degrading treatments, harsh prison conditions, arbitrary arrests and detention, lack of due process, unfair trials, infringement on citizens’ privacy, and restrictions on freedom of speech, press, assembly, associating, and religion. And most of all, each year thousands of Iranians are executed by the clergies in Iran, accused of being agents of enemies, non-Shiites and believers of other religions, drug traffickers, and so on.
In the middle of last December the U.N. General Assembly adopted a resolution about the violations of human rights that is practiced daily in Iran. The resolution particularly conveyed serious concern about ongoing severe limitations and restrictions on the right to freedom of thought, conscience, religion or belief. Therefore, the presently so-called “reformist” Islamic government is propaganda and myth, and clearly the regime survives by brutality against its people.
Read more: Eurasia Review
Iran Briefing | News Press Focus on Human Rights Violation by IRGC, Iran Human Rights