Eumans has sent an open letter to the UN Security Council and MEPs asking the European Parliament to take action through a resolution based on the content of the open letter:
Open letter to the European members of the UN Security Council on Iran
to the Heads of the Governments of Denmark, France, Greece, Latvia and the United Kingdom
We write concerning the bloody repression of demonstrations in Iran. Despite the government-imposed internet blackout, accounts of what has happened since the mass protest of late December 2025 are reaching the wider world. The latest accounts of days of brutal repression put the number of deaths at around 30.000, many more have been injured and do not dare to go to the hospitals to be treated for fear of being apprehended if not killed on the spot.
While we believe that all European Embassies in the Islamic Republic should keep their doors open to provide refuge for those in need of physical protection, we are convinced that a stronger stance on Iran should be taken paired with an international investigation on the bloody crackdown should be launched.
To this end, we call on you, as permanent and rotating members of the United Nations Security Council, to formally bring the issue before the Council as a matter of urgency so that the International Criminal court may exercise its jurisdiction with respect to a crime referred to in article 5 in accordance with the provisions of the Court’s Statute.
As a matter of fact, article 13 (a) of the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court clearly states that “A situation in which one or more of such crimes appears to have been committed is referred to the Prosecutor by the Security Council acting under Chapter VII of the Charter of the United Nations”.
At the same time, we urge you, to lead the procedure to designate the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps as a terrorist organization like Australia, Bahrain, Canada, Ecuador, Paraguay, Saudi Arabia, Sweden and the United States have done. Sanctions, both economic and diplomatic, have proven not to be up to the task of containing the criminal conducts of the Iranian regime, the time has come for Europe to finally live up to the highest standards of international law, the same norms and principles for which she was founded as a political institution, and pursue justice triggering the international instruments she was instrumental in establishing.