In solidarity with #Iran’s young generation on International Youth Day
http://iran-hrm.com/index.php/2017/08/11/in-solidarity-with-irans-young-generation-on-international-youth-day/
In solidarity with Iran’s young generation on International Youth Day
August
12 marks International Youth Day to recognize and draw attention to the
issue of “Youth Building Peace”. It celebrates young people’s
contributions to conflict prevention and transformation as well as
inclusion, social justice, and sustainable peace.
In
Iran, however, the atmosphere of growth and advancement for the younger
generations have been eliminated by the Iranian regime’s suppression of
their freedom of speech and the press, closure of universities, sending
young people to war, and plundering the public’s wealth. Thus Iranian
youths have found no opportunity for contributing to global peace.
A population of 23 million people between 15 to 29 years of age has made Iran one of the world’s largest young nation.
This
young nation, however, faces soaring unemployment as one of its main
problems. Almost 15 million people have no jobs, at least 4.5 million of
whom are university graduates.[1] In 1986, almost 70% of university
graduates could find jobs shortly after leaving school. By 2011, that
rate dropped to less than 50%.[2]
That
is, more than 50% of Iran’s educated are unemployed while the rest are
employed in menial jobs such as construction workers, street peddlers,
repairmen, etc. which are not compatible with their professional
training and studies.
Under
such hopeless circumstances, the majority of Iran’s at least 14
million[3] drug users are young men and women. The average age of
addiction in Iran has dropped to 20, according to reports published by
state media. [4]
The
number of people suffering from drug addiction has more than doubled
since 2011, according to a survey by a drug control group.[5]
However,
the figures published by the state should be considered as minimum with
the actual figures being considerably higher. Disappointingly, the
Iranian regime has no short or long-term plans to contain the unbridled
spread of addiction especially among the young populace.
Experts
argue that easy access to cheap narcotic drugs has contributed to the
horrific number of drug addicts in Iran. It is common knowledge that
narcotics can be purchased much faster than a loaf of bread.
Unfortunately,
the regime in Iran and specifically its Islamic Revolutionary Guards
Corps (IRGC) are actively involved in drug trade and distribution as
they find this as one of the most effective ways to quell and paralyze
the country’s disgruntled and rebellious youth, posing an existential
threat.
In
addition, the human rights situation in Iran has been constantly
deteriorating over the past 39 years. The clerical regime has a long
history of crackdown on youths for demanding their basic rights. Atena
Daemi, Arash Sadeghi, Majid Assadi, Golrokh Iraei, Ramin Hosseinpanahi
are amongst the countless people who have been suffering long years in
jail for daring to stand up for their own and their people’s rights.
Iran
holds the highest rate of per capita executions in the world. Despite
increasing international censure, executions are carried out
relentlessly on a daily basis hitting an unprecedented record by hanging
101 prisoners in July 2017, alone.
The
majority of those executed were under 30 years old including two young
men, 24 and 27, who were hanged in public. In a controversial act of
execution, a man who was arrested as a minor was hanged in Adelabad
Prison of Shiraz, southern Iran. Execution of Alireza Tajiki was carried
out despite wave of international criticism at Iran’s human rights
violations.
In
a recent study, a third of all 16 to 25-year-olds said they would leave
the country, if given the opportunity. Iran ranks world’s first
in brain drain with the flight of 150,000 elites per year.
Those
who cannot escape the inferno created by the mullahs in Iran, however,
are awaiting any opportunity to settle their score with the mullahs.
In
a recent case, Asghar Nahvipour, a young Iranian athlete, beat up a
mullah who was disturbing a young woman in a metro station in south
Tehran. Eyewitnesses say he was fired at point blank range by the police
while he was crying out, “We don’t want these mullahs. We don’t want
this Islam. What kind of a country is this? What kind of Islam is this?”
The news of this arbitrary murder outraged the nation and aroused great sympathy.
Tributes
to the victim poured in on social media, with many youths writing, “The
heroes do not die”, “Fly high hero, you will be never forgotten” or “we
will continue your path.”
These
mottos bespeak of the determination of Iran’s courageous youth to
realize a humane future for themselves and the whole nation. The
International Youth Day is an appropriate opportunity to call on the
international community to support their demands and help them reach the
peaceful society they deserve.
As
we celebrate the young people building peace across the world, lest
forget the young men and women who dream of a world with equal human
rights.
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