TEHRAN, Jun. 14 (MNA) President of Irans Academy of Medical Sciences had strongly condemned UN decision to remove Saudi Arabia from child-rights blacklist.
Seyyed Alireze Marandi, former Minister of Health and member of Parliament, in his letter to the United Nations Secretary General Ban Ki-moon has urged the organization to get beck to its primary nature of ensuring peace and stability, underlining we demand that the UN decision be reversed and that meaningful steps are taken to restore a minimal degree of credibility to this world body that was meant to represent us all.
Here is the full text of his letter:
14 June 2016
United Nations Secretary General
His Excellency Ban Ki-Moon,
Excellency,
A year after my May 18, 2015 letter to you protesting the United Nations' silence on Saudi Arabia's atrocities against Yemen's civilian population, we witnessed a very small but positive move when the UN finally blacklisted the Saudi regime for its killing of children in Yemen. Since the inception of this illegal war, we have been extremely disappointed that the United Nations has not even taken meaningful action in aiding the wounded and those in need of immediate assistance, especially given the year-long Saudi blockade preventing medical and food supplies from reaching millions of Yemeni people. Nevertheless, the international community - minus the United States and other Saudi allies - eagerly welcomed the blacklisting of the Saudi regime as a step in the right direction.
However, to our utter shock and amazement, less than a week after the listing, the Saudi regime's name was removed from the list. Most tragic of all was your personal admission that this decision was made after several members threatened to end their donations to the United Nations.
I have written this and previous letters about atrocities committed by the United States over illegal sanctions that imposed restrictions on food and medical supplies to Iran - in addition to missives about the violent atrocities of the Israeli apartheid regime and Saudi Arabia in Gaza and Yemen. We believe that the United Nations belongs to all nations, but by your own admission, today wealth and power determine the decision making process in this organization. Where does that leave the overwhelming majority of the global population? How can you justify the UN's silence on the maimed, injured, orphaned, starving children of Yemen?
It seems that the United Nations has practically admitted the loss of any moral legitimacy. The United Nations was set up explicitly and primarily to ensure peace and stability. Instead it has become an organization that is enabling and prolonging war. Our expectation was that instead of bending to the blackmail of a few rogue nations and removing the Saudi regime from the list, you would take steps to force the Saudis to end this criminal war against the people of Yemen. Indeed, we demand that the UN decision be reversed and that meaningful steps are taken to restore a minimal degree of credibility to this world body that was meant to represent us all.