Review of Article 8 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and its comparison with the constitution of the Islamic Republic of Iran

Do you know: There are 30 human rights laws. These are your most basic human rights and belong to you.
Article 8 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights states in short: “The law must protect human rights”
The right to a fair trial is one of the fundamental rights of humans.

Every human being should have the right to have a fair and public trial within a reasonable timeframe.
Governments are required to ensure and protect the fundamental rights of individuals and citizens.
However, many principles in the laws of the Islamic Republic of Iran, which come from the thirty-second to thirty-nine principles, imply the right to the judicial security of the people.
And all of these principles can guarantee the judicial security and, if these principles are followed, the community will enjoy a favorable judicial security.
But in fact, what we are witnessing is a description of events that clearly violate the constitutional principles of the Islamic Republic of Iran and unfair trials.
Acts such as jury trials, lack of access to lawyers, citing confessions taken under torture, are all a clear indication of the violation of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.