Chairs of USCIRF Release Letter of Solidarity with Iranian People
Call on US Government to Support Protesters
Contacts:
Katrina Lantos Swett
President, Lantos Foundation
info@lantosfoundation.org
(603) 545-4430
Robert P. George
McCormick Professor of Jurisprudence, Princeton University
and Herbert W. Vaughan Senior Fellow, Witherspoon Institute
rgeorge@princeton.edu
(609) 258-3270
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE - A bi-partisan group of past Chairs together with the current Chair of the US Commission on International Religious Freedom (USCIRF) today published an open letter to the people of Iran praising their courage and expressing solidarity with them. In addition, they call on the US government to support the protesters in Iran and to send a clear signal that human rights and the Iranian government’s treatment of dissidents will be at the top of the agenda in any future dealings between the US and Iran.
The letter also urges governments and businesses to actively thwart Iran’s efforts at internet censorship and calls on the US government to robustly fund internet freedom technologies to keep access open to the internet and social media platforms.
The letter, signed by a broad bi-partisan group of academic, religious and human rights leaders reads in part “We are inspired by your bravery. We stand with you and call on our own government and governments and peoples throughout the world to support you.”
The letter is published in response to nearly a week of demonstrations across Iran that began as a protest against high food prices and rampant unemployment but has broadened into a political movement demanding leadership changes and greater freedom and human rights. The government has responded with violence- over 20 protesters have been killed and hundreds have been arrested.
The full text of the letter is printed below.
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January 4, 2018
To the people of Iran:
We are Americans each of whom has chaired the United States Commission on International Religious Freedom. Each of us has, moreover, publicly advocated for the freedom of prisoners of conscience and persecuted people of all faiths and beliefs in the Islamic Republic.
In that capacity, we have pressed the United States government to give priority to the rights and freedoms of persecuted Iranians in America’s dealings with the regime in Tehran.
Today we write to express solidarity and support for your courageous efforts to restore your Nation’s dignity and put an end to the abuses and deprivation which the people of Iran have suffered. We are inspired by your bravery. We stand with you and call on our own government and governments and peoples throughout the world to support you.
Governments and business firms who are in sympathy with the people of Iran and their aspirations to national dignity and freedom can, for example, assist in thwarting censorship and the efforts of the Tehran regime to shut down social media platforms, such as WhatsApp, by which the Iranian people can communicate with one another and with foreign journalists freely. Keeping open the corridors of communication through which information flows in all directions is vital. To that end, we call for robust funding by our government of technologies that will enable Iranians and others in closed societies safely and freely to access the internet and social media platforms.
What’s more, human rights organizations, international journalists, as well as governments and their embassies can assist the cause of Iranian freedom and self-determination by documenting and publicizing human rights offenses—detentions, beatings, murders—committed by the Tehran authorities against peaceful protestors. It is important for the world and for the people of Iran to be apprised in a timely manner of offenses that the government will commit and, indeed, is already committing.
A clear signal should be sent that human rights issues—above all the regime’s treatment of dissidents—will be at the top of the agenda in any state-to-state negotiation, be it diplomatic or economic.
When Iranians rose up against their oppressors in 2009, too few supported them in a sustained and meaningful way. Please be assured that in 2018 we are doing everything we can to ensure your freedoms.
We pray that your courageous efforts will lead swiftly to the realization of your aspirations, which we heartily endorse, for a free, peaceful, and prosperous Iran.
Signers
Elliott Abrams
Senior Fellow for Middle Eastern Studies, Council on Foreign Relations
USCIRF Chair, 2000-2001
Preeta Bansal
CEO, Social Emergence Corporation and Visiting Scholar, MIT Media Lab
USCIRF Chair, 2004-2005
Felice D. Gaer
Director, Jacob Blaustein Institute for the Advancement of Human Rights
USCIRF Chair, 2002-2003, 2006-2007, and 2008-2009
Robert P. George
McCormick Professor of Jurisprudence, Princeton University
and Herbert W. Vaughan Senior Fellow, Witherspoon Institute
USCIRF Chairman, 2013-2014 and 2015-2016
Leonard Leo
Executive Vice President, Federalist Society for Law and Public Policy
USCIRF Chair, 2009-2010, 2010-2011, and 2011-2012
Daniel Mark
Assistant Professor of Political Science, Villanova University
and Visiting Fellow, University of Notre Dame
USCIRF Chairman, 2017-2018
Thomas J. Reese, S.J.
Senior Analyst, Religion News Service
USCIRF Chair, 2016-2017
Ambassador Rabbi David Saperstein
Senior Fellow, Georgetown University’s Berkley Center on Religion, Peace and Foreign Policy and the Foreign Service School’s Center for Jewish Civilization
USCIRF Chair, 1999-2000
Katrina Lantos Swett
President, Lantos Foundation for Human Rights and Justice
USCIRF Chair, 2012-2013 and 2014-2015
Michael K. Young
President, Texas A&M University
USCIRF Chair, 2001-2002 and 2003-2004
(Affiliations are for purposes of identification.)