These charges can carry the death penalty, especially in national security cases.4 Due to this, minorities might face execution for practicing their culture and/or religion. Impoverished and marginalized minorities have been over-represented among those executed for drug offenses. Additionally, Kurdish political prisoners charged with national security offences represent almost half of the total number of political prisoners. Overall, half of those executed for affiliation with a political party or a banned group between 2010 and 2018 were Kurds, while a quarter were Balochis and over one-tenth Arabs. There have also been serious concerns over the secret executions of Ahwazi Arab prisoners in 2018, as Ahwazi Arab activists have reported that 22 men were executed in secret in 2018.5 Reports received from Kurdistan of Iran alone indicate that between 2014 and 2019, 449 Kurdish border couriers were shot at and killed by Iranian border authorities, with another 554 couriers injured primarily due to border shootings.6 Though the Iranian government doesn’t publish accurate labor statistics which could be used to create employment to population ratios by target populations, civil society reports suggest that Iran’s minority populations are constantly being denied equal access to employment opportunities.7 B. Women and girls Article 3 of the Constitution of the Islamic Republic of Iran stipulates that it is a duty of the State to work towards “the abolition of all forms of undesirable discrimination and the provision of equitable opportunities for all, in both the material and the intellectual spheres.”8 Article 20 guarantees that all citizens of Iran, men and women, enjoy the equal protection of the law and of rights, “in conformity with the Islamic criteria.” Article 21 emphasizes that “the government must ensure the rights of women in all respects, in conformity with Islamic criteria”. While these provisions supposedly safeguard the human rights of women and protect them from discrimination, such legal guarantees exist as long as they are in conformity with “Islamic criteria.” According to Article 4 of the Constitution the Guardian Council of the Islamic Republic of Iran is entrusted with the definition and determination of the framework of what constitutes the “Islamic criteria” or standards. Among the 12 non-elected members of the Guardian Council, only the six male clerics directly appointed by the Supreme Leader are responsible for such task. While the aforementioned provisions supposedly safeguard the human rights of women and protect them from discrimination, such legal guarantees exist as long as they are in conformity with “Islamic criteria.” The room of interpretation allowed under the 4 Human Rights Watch: https://www.hrw.org/news/2020/07/10/iran-death-penalty-protest-related-charges 5 Amnesty International, Iran: “Fears mounting for detained Ahwazi Arabs amid reports of secret executions”, 13 November 2018, accessible at: https://www.amnesty.org/en/latest/news/2018/11/iran-fears-mounting-for-detained-ahwazi-arabs-amidreports-of-secret-executions/ 6 KMMK-G, Human Rights Violations in Kurdistan of Iran, April 2020, accessible at: https://kmmkge.org/sd/wpcontent/uploads/2020/05/KMMK-G-2019_Annual_Report-for-the-Attention-of-the-OHCHR-Desk-of-the-UNSpecial-Rapporteur-on-theSituation-of-Human-Rights-in-Iran.pdf 7 <https://minorityrights.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/03/Rights-Denied-Violations-against-ethnic-and-religious-minorities-inIran.pdf> 8 Constitution of the Islamic Republic of Iran, https://irandataportal.syr.edu/wp-content/uploads/constitution-english-1368.pdf Field Code Changed 2

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