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Showing posts with the label Transitional Justice

Iraq Before the UN Human Rights Council: Promises Without Accountability

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Iraq Before the UN Human Rights Council: Promises Without Accountability By Hussein Zainulabdeen | Independent Researcher — Iraqi Minority Rights | husseinmonitor.com In January 2025, Iraq appeared before the United Nations Human Rights Council for its fourth Universal Periodic Review — a moment that should have marked a turning point. It did not. The UPR process, designed to hold governments accountable to their international human rights obligations, produced 263 recommendations from 93 countries. Iraq accepted 181 of them. On paper, that looks like progress. In practice, it continues a pattern that anyone who has watched Iraq's human rights record knows well: accept the recommendations, ignore the implementation. What the UN Recommended The recommendations issued to Iraq in January 2025 were not new. Many had appeared in the previous cycle — in 2019 — and in the cycle before that. They included: Imposing a moratorium on executions and ending the use of th...

Transitional Justice in Iraq: Illusion or Reality?

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Transitional Justice in Iraq: Illusion or Reality? By Hussein Zainulabdeen | Independent Researcher — Iraqi Minority Rights | husseinmonitor.com Iraq has had 23 amnesties between 1975 and 2016. It has had dozens of prosecutions, multiple truth commissions, a special tribunal for Saddam Hussein, a Yazidi Survivors Law, and years of UNITAD investigations. It has received hundreds of UN recommendations on accountability and human rights reform. It has accepted most of them. And yet, for the survivors of Iraq's worst atrocities — the Yazidi genocide, the Turkmen massacres, the Christian displacement, the Shabak and Mandaean persecution — justice remains largely theoretical. Not coming soon. Not delayed. Theoretical. The question worth asking in 2024 is not whether Iraq has transitional justice mechanisms. It does. The question is whether those mechanisms have produced anything that survivors would recognize as justice. The Gap Between Law and Reality The Internat...