UN rapporteur says world must back Iranian pursuit of rights, justice


The UN special rapporteur on human rights in Iran, Mai Sato, urged the international community to support the Iranian people and back a UN investigation into alleged abuses linked to Iran’s protests, saying accountability was essential.
“Now is the time for the international community to respond and to support the people of Iran in their pursuit for fundamental rights and accountability,” Sato told the UN Human Rights Council on Friday.
A proposal before the Geneva-based body seeks to extend by two years the mandate of a UN investigation launched in 2022 after a previous wave of protests and to open an urgent inquiry into violations linked to unrest that began on Dec. 28, for possible future legal proceedings.
“I respectfully urge this Council to empower the Fact-Finding Mission to investigate these protest-related violations to ensure transparency and accountability,” Sato said.
Sato said Iran’s near-total internet shutdown had obscured the true scale of the violence.
“The death toll remains contested due to the shutdown, enabling the state to control information flow,” she said, adding that official figures cite more than 3,000 deaths while some civil society estimates run into the tens of thousands, though “neither these figures can be verified.”
She said she had received reports of the use of lethal force against unarmed protesters, mass detentions including of schoolchildren, raids on hospitals and coercion of detainees into false confessions.