۱۴۰۵ خرداد ۵, سه‌شنبه

“The Voice of the Iranian People Is Not Being Heard”

 

@hadi_heidari


“The Voice of the Iranian People Is Not Being Heard”

Open Letter: On Ongoing Negotiations and the Exclusion of the Iranian People from Decision-Making Processes

To: Governments, international institutions, and parties engaged in ongoing negotiations and agreements with the Islamic Republic of Iran

We write at a critical moment, as negotiations and diplomatic discussions concerning potential agreements with the Islamic Republic of Iran—including sanctions relief and the unfreezing of blocked assets—once again gain momentum.

Yet once again, the Iranian people—who have borne the highest costs over past decades, particularly in recent months and weeks—remain excluded from decisions concerning their own future.

While regional and international actors pursue their respective strategic interests and calculations, the Iranian people, and particularly Iran’s fragile civil society, are under greater pressure than ever before.

The intensification of the security environment, widespread repression, executions, arrests, internet restrictions, and political closure have further weakened society’s capacity for civic action and democratic change.

Under such circumstances, any economic or political agreement concluded without clear, binding, and verifiable human rights conditions risks not alleviating the suffering of the population, but instead reproducing cycles of repression and instability.

Past experience—particularly following the Iran–Iraq War and previous periods of sanctions relief—has demonstrated that released financial resources do not necessarily improve public welfare, but can instead strengthen military-security structures and expand the influence of unaccountable institutions within the economy and political system.

If governments and international institutions are genuinely committed to sustainable stability, peace, and fundamental human rights principles, any form of economic relief must be explicitly and verifiably conditioned upon the following:

  • An immediate halt to executions, with a view toward the abolition of the death penalty
  • The immediate and unconditional release of prisoners of conscience and political and civil detainees
  • An end to arbitrary detentions and the repression of women and ethnic and religious minorities
  • Guaranteed free and stable access to the global internet
  • The establishment of independent international oversight mechanisms regarding the allocation and use of released financial resources

The Iranian people are not passive observers in these processes. They are active agents who have articulated their demands for human dignity, equality, and accountability at immense personal cost.

No agreement can be considered sustainable or legitimate if it is built upon the exclusion of the very people who have paid the highest price