Geneva, September 4 (RHC)-- A senior Iranian diplomat says the United States with its dark human rights record does not deserve roles in the Human Rights Council.
Iran's ambassador and permanent representative to United Nations and other international organizations in Geneva Ali Bahreini made the statement in a post on his X account in reaction to meddlesome remarks by the U.S. ambassador against Tehran, who is set to chair the UN Human Rights Council Social Forum this November.
He attached a video clip to his post showing some cases of human rights violations commited by the United States, including the downing of an Iranian passenger plane by a U.S. Navy guided-missile cruiser over the country’s territorial waters in the Persian Gulf, which killed all 290 people on board.
On July 3, 1988, the USS Vincennes fired missiles at an Iran Air Airbus A300B2 which was flying over the Hormuz Strait from the port city of Bandar Abbas to Dubai, carrying 274 passengers and 16 crew members.
Iran is commemorating the 35th anniversary of the downing of its passenger plane by a US Navy guided-missile cruiser over the Persian Gulf.
The clip also showed the U.S. discriminatory attitude to ethnic and religious minorities, the murder of George Floyd who was choked to death by a white police officer, anti-immigration policies and the miserable situation of refugees as well as the White House support for the terrorist groups.
The Iranian diplomat said the US regime is addicted to war that killed "over a thousand individuals by its police forces" every year. However, Bahreini, added that Washington "continues to occupy undeservingly a seat in the UN Human Rights Council."
The Iranian envoy's post came after U.S. Ambassador to the UN's Human Rights Council Michèle Taylor made interfering remarks against Iran and condemned Iranian officials in UN leadership roles on the anniversary of the death of a young woman in police custody.
Mahsa Amini, 22, fainted at a police station and was pronounced dead days later on September 16 at a Tehran hospital. An investigation attributed her death to medical condition, dismissing allegations that she had been beaten by police forces.