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Untitled Document
UNITED NATIONS
Economic and Social Council
Distr. General
E/CN.4/2005/NGO/260
11 March 2005
English only
COMMISSION ON HUMAN RIGHTS
Sixty-first session Item 5 of the provisional agenda
THE RIGHT OF PEOPLES TO SELF-DETERMINATION AND ITS APPLICATION
TO PEOPLES UNDER COLONIAL OR ALIEN DOMINATION OR FOREIGN OCCUPATION
Written statement submitted* by Transnational Radical Party,
a non-governmental organization in general consultative status
The Secretary-General has received the following written statement
which is circulated in accordance with Economic and Social Council resolution
1996/31.
[11 February 2005]
* This written statement is issued, unedited, in the language(s)
received from the submitting non-governmental organization(s).
THE RIGHT OF PEOPLES TO SELF-DETERMINATION AND ITS
APPLICATION TO PEOPLES UNDER COLONIAL OR ALIEN DOMINATION OR FOREIGN OCCUPATION
Over 4.5 million indigenous Ahwazi Arab people live in the
territory known as al-Ahwaz or Khuzestan in present-day Islamic Republic of
Iran. Prior to its annexation by Iran in 1925, al- Ahwaz used to be an autonomous,
and at times, independent territory, inhabited entirely by indigenous Ahwazi
Arab tribes. The AHWAZIS believe that the exercise of their right of self-determination
would provide them with a suitable means of conflict resolution for the ongoing
conflict with the Iranian government. The prospect of the full enjoyment of
this right could provide the basis for negotiations and dialogue. For the past
500 years, the region was called Arabistan by Persian rulers (signifying the
territory’s Arab character). The central government changed the territory’s
name to Khuzestan in 1936. Currently, Al-Ahwaz or Khuzestan is an area of 69,000
sq kilometres, which lies between South western Iran, bordering also Iraq, Kuwait
and the Gulf.
Iran has declared the area a military zone, no international
observers, including media, are allowed in the region. The Iranian Government
has also tried to close down Al-Jazeera offices in Tehran for reporting on the
Ahwazi situation in January 2005. In recent years, Iran has intensified the
militarization of the Al-Ahwaz area. According to a Human Rights Watch Report,
“Millions of landmines remaining from the Iran-Iraq war in the province
of Khuzestan kill and maim indigenous inhabitants of Khuzestan in south-western
Iran every day”.
The overwhelming majority number of Ahwazis believe in non-violence
and in the use of civic means to establish a civil society based on the rule
of law and to foster democratic principles and values. However, frustration
of the poor and desperate Ahwaz youth is being viewed as the cause of the current
violence in Khuzestan, including the destruction of oil installations. Iran,
on the other hand, refuses to release thousands of Ahwazi political prisoners,
many of whom have been incarcerated for more than 20 years. Among the most known
Ahwazi prisoners who faced execution in recent times were: Bornas Sojirat, Aziz
Ma’toog, Mohammad Shafigh, Abdolreza Saa’edi and Abhas Jamousi.
The Ahwazis have been subjected to the eradication of their
national identity, culture, language, and customs; and are faced with forced
assimilation and imposition of Persian language and culture. The Ahwazi children
are being deprived of the use and study of their language. Ahwazis cannot wear
their national and ethnic dresses and costumes in official centres. Therefore,
a dominant Persian minority influences in every respect of life, political,
social, cultural and economical of the Ahwazis. As such the legitimate demands
of self determination of the Ahwazi people are often labelled as “separatist”,
“secessionist” or called “stooges of foreign countries”
or “danger to security and territorial integrity”.
The people of al-Ahwaz believe that the future of Iran as a
modern and a progressive state, and a responsible member of the International
community, could be guaranteed only through a voluntary association of all national
groups constituting Iran; where they will have the legitimate opportunity to
develop their respective cultures, languages, histories, economies, under an
appropriate manifestation of self-determination and a system of good governance.
The Ahwazis have often stated their desire to live in coexistence with all groups
in present-day Iran and have advocated the realisation of a genuine democratic
reform process to guarantee a form of the right of self-determination that ensures
democracy, human rights and the rule of law.
Indigenous Ahwazis have been brutalized and deliberately kept
backward by the successive regimes of Iran. While their land accounts for over
80% of Iranian oil production, they benefit no revenue in return with half of
Ahwazi people in absolute poverty and 80% of Ahwazi children suffering from
malnutrition.
Source: UNCHR
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