Iran criticised at UN rights forum

Western countries today voiced concern at the rising number of executions in Iran as well as the "treatment of women as second…

Western countries today voiced concern at the rising number of executions in Iran as well as the "treatment of women as second class citizens" there.

Envoys from Canada and Portugal, the latter speaking on behalf of the European Union, criticised the Islamic Republic at a session of the United Nations Human Rights Council.

Canada's John Von Kaufmann said Iran's "deteriorating human rights situation" contravened its obligations under both international and domestic laws.

"Canada is concerned by the treatment of women as second class citizens under Iranian law and the suppression of peaceful demonstration in support of women's rights," he added.

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Relations between Iran and Western nations are strained over the country's nuclear programme which the West suspects is a cover for developing atomic bombs. Iran says the programme is peaceful and designed to produce energy.

UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Louise Arbour said she had urged Iranian officials in talks in Tehran last week to ensure the right to peaceful public expression, and had raised the subject of the execution of juveniles.

Iran, which is not a full member of the Human Rights Council, routinely dismisses allegation it is violating human rights, accusing the West of double standards.

The number of executions in the country, many in public, has risen since July with the launch of a summer crackdown on what Iran calls "immoral behaviour".

Murder, rape, adultery, armed robbery, apostasy and drug smuggling are all punishable by death under Iran's sharia law, imposed after the 1979 Islamic revolution.

The official IRNA news agency today said that Iran had hanged three people convicted of involvement in a bombing attack in its oil-rich southwest.