The United Nations observes a moment of silence for Iran's President Raisi, despite his controversial reputation as the 'Butcher of Tehran', following
Iranian state media confirmed early
Monday that President Raisi was killed in a helicopter crash.
Despite earning the nickname the
"Butcher of Tehran" for presiding over Iran’s human rights abuses,
the United Nations on Monday held a moment of silence for Ebrahim Raisi after
the Iranian president died in a helicopter crash.
At the request of Russia, China, and
Algeria, representatives – including United States Deputy Ambassador to the
U.N. Robert Wood – stood at the U.N. Security Council for a minute to honor
Raisi.
Israeli U.N. Ambassador Gilad Erdan
called the moment of silence in memory of "mass murdering" Raisi a
"disgrace."
Erdan slammed the U.N. Security Council
for doing nothing to advance the release of the remaining hostages who have
been in Hamas captivity since the Oct. 7 attack on Israel.
This Council, Erdan said, "bowed
its head for a man responsible for massacring and murdering thousands in Iran,
in Israel, and around the globe. What’s next? Will the Council dedicate a
moment of silence to commemorate Hitler?"
State Department spokesperson Matt
Miller addressed the U.S.’ participation in the moment of silence at an
afternoon press briefing.
Asked if the U.S.’ participation was
appropriate, Miller clarified that "we have been quite clear that Ebrahim
Raisi was a brutal participant in the repression of the Iranian people for
nearly four decades."
Miller pointed to Raisi’s involvement in
"numerous horrific human rights abuses, including playing a key role in
the extrajudicial killing of thousands of political prisoners in 1988."
"Some of the worst human rights
abuses occurred during his tenure as president, especially the human rights
abuses against the women and girls of Iran," Miller said, but qualified:
"That said, we regret any loss of life. We don’t want to see anyone die in
a helicopter crash. But that doesn’t change the reality of his record, both as
a judge and as the president of Iran."
Behnam Ben Taleblu, an expert on Iranian
security at the Foundation for the Defense of Democracies (FDD), criticized
both the U.N. and the State Department for self-defeating actions.
"Rather than use this time to push
for moral clarity, this muddled approach towards Raisi’s bloody past mistakenly
prioritizes diplomatic niceties over reality," Taleblu said.
A senior adviser to the U.S. Ambassador
to the U.N. told Fox News Digital that it "is [the] diplomatic norm to
stand for moments of silence in the Security Council and by no means represents
any honor or tribute to a man whose repression and brutality the U.S. consistently
countered in that very room."
"Raisi was a brutal participant in
the repression of the Iranian people for nearly four decades. He was involved in numerous, horrific human
rights abuses, including playing a key role in the extrajudicial killings of
thousands of political prisoners in 1988," the adviser said. "Some of
the worst human rights abuses on record, especially against the women and girls
of Iran, took place during his tenure."
Iranian state media confirmed early
Monday that President Raisi, along with others, including the country's foreign
minister, Hossein Amirabdollahian, was found dead after an hours-long search
through a foggy, mountainous region of the country's northwest.
Raisi was returning via helicopter after
traveling to Iran's border with Azerbaijan to inaugurate a dam with
Azerbaijan's President Ilham Aliyev when the crash happened in the Dizmar
forest in East Azerbaijan province.
Raisi was seen as a protégé to Iran's
supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and a potential successor for his
position within the country's Shiite theocracy.
But Raisi’s death has also highlighted
his human rights record.
In 1988, at the end of Iran's long war
with Iraq, Raisi served on what would become known as "death
commissions," which handed down death sentences for political prisoners,
militants and others. International rights groups estimate that as many as
5,000 people were executed.
Raisi has defended his actions, saying
at a news conference that he was "proud of being a defender of human
rights and of people's security and comfort as a prosecutor wherever I
was."
Activists abroad, like the New
York-based Center for Human Rights in Iran, described Raisi’s presidency as
seeing "a stunning escalation of state repression and violence against
peaceful dissent in Iran."
"Raisi presided over a country
suffocated by a regime that fears its own people," said Hadi Ghaemi, the
center's executive director. "He was merely one boot on the necks of the
Iranian people; others can easily take his place."
Mass protests swept the country in 2022
after the death of Mahsa Amini, a woman who had been detained over her
allegedly loose headscarf, or hijab.
The monthslong security crackdown that
followed the demonstrations killed more than 500 people and more than 22,000
others were detained.
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