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Iranian crackdown met with silence by UN human-rights experts

But U.N. experts are quick to condemn the U.S., Israel, UN Watch reports.

United Nations
The U.N. General Assembly adopts a resolution on “Support for the mandate of the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA)” during the resumed 10th Emergency Special Session of the General Assembly, Dec. 11, 2024. Credit: Manuel Elías/U.N. Photo.

Most U.N. human rights experts have not condemned the Iranian regime’s mass killing of protesters, a UN Watch report reveals.

“The majority of U.N. human-rights experts—known officially as Special Procedures—have been mostly silent on the Islamic Republic’s violent crackdown against civilian protests since Dec. 28, 2025,” the Geneva-based UN Watch said in a report on Jan. 14.

Protests in Iran broke out on Dec. 28 over the collapsing currency and quickly morphed into mass demonstrations in all the country’s 31 provinces. The regime reacted with violence.

As of Jan. 14, at least 2,571 people had died, of whom 2,403 were protesters and 147 individuals associated with the Iranian government, reported Human Rights Activists in Iran (HRAI). Some estimates put the death toll much higher.

The numbers “far exceed the number of deaths during any other protests or unrest in Iran in recent decades and resemble the chaos during the events of the Islamic Revolution in 1979,” HRAI said.

Yet UN Watch, a nongovernmental organization that monitors the performance of the United Nations, found, “Out of 87 Special Procedures, only five issued or endorsed an official statement condemning the regime’s crackdown.”

One statement published on Jan. 13, about two-and-a-half weeks into the violence, was signed by five U.N. special rapporteurs: Mai Sato, Morris Tidball-Binz, Irene Khan, Gina Romero and Richard Bennett.

Aside from this statement, there have been only a few posts on X, which UN Watch criticized as an “extremely weak response” given the scale, severity and barbarity of the government’s actions.

“This silence is not the result of institutional paralysis. Rather, it reflects a pattern of selective engagement and politicized mandate overreach by U.N. human rights experts,” UN Watch said.

In contrast, U.N. experts are quick to condemn the U.S. and Israel.

On Jan. 7, four days after U.S. forces arrested Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro, 19 U.N. experts signed an official statement “strongly condemning” the move, UN Watch said.

On June 5, 2020, less than two weeks after the police killing of George Floyd in Minnesota, 27 U.N. experts called on the U.S. government to “address systemic racism in the criminal justice system.”

On Sept. 19, 2024, two days after Israel’s pager attack on Hezbollah terrorists in Lebanon, 22 U.N. experts condemned Israel for “terrifying” violations of international law. On May 29, 2024, two days after an Israeli strike against Hamas sparked a fire in nearby civilian tents, 52 U.N. experts demanded “decisive international action to end the bloodshed in Gaza.”

UN Watch also pointed out that U.N. experts overreach their mandates. “U.N. experts routinely mobilize on issues far removed from their areas of responsibility while failing to respond to mass atrocities.”

On Oct. 3, 2025, 28 U.N. experts criticized the Trump peace plan for Gaza, despite having no mandate-related connection to Middle East peace negotiations, the NGO said.

Less than a week after Hamas’s Oct. 7, 2023, massacre of Israeli civilians, 50 U.N. experts issued a statement condemning both Hamas and Israel, demanding de-escalation, and blaming the violence on Israel’s “56-year-old occupation.”

“Signatories included mandate-holders on climate change, albinism and country situations such as Cambodia, Eritrea and Iran—mandates with no direct nexus to the conflict itself,” UN Watch said.

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