E/CN.4/2005/61/Add.1
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General information received from the Government
By letter dated 28 June 2004, the Government of the Islamic Republic of Iran
provided the Special Rapporteur with information about the latest developments in
the administration of justice with respect to minorities, in particular, the
establishment of the Committee of Minorities, which would be competent to deal
with the problems of religious minorities in Iran; the issuance of a presidential
circular on the facilitation of recruitment of members of religious minorities to the
public sector; and the adoption of a bill which would allow members of minorities
to receive blood money equal to Muslims, a law that in practice had been enforced
in various court cases.
Observations
142. The Special Rapporteur thanks the Government for the information received.
However, she is still awaiting replies to the several communications related to
particular cases, as well as a reply to her request for an invitation to visit Iran.
143. She would also like to draw the Government’s attention to the fact that the
information she has received, including concerning the Bahá’ís, was the subject of
concern expressed by the Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination in
its most recent concluding observations on Iran (CERD/C/63/CO/6 of 21 August
2003) in which it noted “the reported discrimination faced by certain minorities,
including the Bahá'ís, who are deprived of certain rights, and that certain provisions of
the State party's legislation appear to be discriminatory on both ethnic and religious
grounds”. The Special Rapporteur therefore joins the Committee in recommending
“that the State party ensure that all persons enjoy their right to freedom of thought,
conscience and religion, without any discrimination based on race, colour, descent or
national or ethnic origin … [and] that the State party permit students of different
origins to register in universities without being compelled to state their religion.
Iraq
144. On 10 November 2004, the Special Rapporteur transmitted a communication
to the Government of Iraq regarding information according to which on 7 November
2004, several men reportedly attacked a Christian church in Doura district in south
Bagdad and set it on fire. The ensuing explosion injured at least 20 persons. Earlier,
before dawn on 16 October 2004, five churches were hit by bomb attacks that seemed
designed to intimidate the country's small but deep-rooted Christian community. This
followed a deadlier series of bombings of five churches in Baghdad and Mosul that
reportedly took place during evening services on 1 August 2004, killing 11 people and
wounding more than 50. The wave of explosions began after 6 p.m. as parishioners
gathered inside their neighbourhood churches for services. In the past year alone, over
100 reported and confirmed victims have been members of the Chaldo-Assyrian
community.
145. The attacks against Iraq's 750,000-member Christian minority seemed to
confirm community members’ fears that they might be targeted as suspected
collaborators with United States forces, amid a rising tide of Islamic fundamentalism.