Review of Article 13 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 13 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights refers to the right to freedom of movement for people and the choice of place of residence. From the legal point of view, this is the right of everyone to travel. If anyone wants to change their country of origin or even to leave their nationality for any reason, it is free and the free movement of citizens is a kind of imprisonment for the land.

Given the fact that during the Second World War people fleeing war-torn countries, it was possible to affirm this human right in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and consider refugee as a right for human beings.
The United Nations General Assembly adopted a resolution on the need to clarify the situation of refugees in 1950, which resulted in the establishment of a Convention on Refugees in 1951, and later the 1967 Protocol to abolish the time and geographical constraints of the Convention.
The convention defines refugees as well as UN assignments and refugee countries.
However, Article 155 of the Constitution of the Islamic Republic of Iran refers to the conditions for admission of refugees in Iran
Today, in the twenty-first century, we continue to witness wars and clashes and acts of violence against humanity that lead to a massive wave of refugees. Refugees are people who, due to mistreatment and torture and human rights violations, can not live in their own country, and unfortunately, Iran is one of the countries that many refugees leave the country every year.