Monday, June 29, 2009

Amnesty International urgent action

URGENT ACTION

HUMAN RIGHTS LAWYER RISKS TORTURE

Human rights lawyer Mohammad Mostafaei was arrested on 25 June, probably in relation to his human rights activities and his peaceful exercise of the right to freedom of expression and association after the disputed re-election of President Ahmadinejad. Mohammad Mostafaei is a prisoner of conscience. He is at risk of torture.

 

Mohammad Mostafaei was arrested in Tehran on 25 June by plainclothes officials, while he was away from his home with his wife and daughter. The officials searched the family home and Mohammad Mostafaei’s office, and then took him away. His whereabouts remain unknown since his arrest.

Mohammad Mostafaei is a human rights lawyer who is best known for his campaigning against the execution in Iran of people convicted of crimes committed when they were under the age of 18. He is representing at least 25 juveniles sentenced to death for such crimes.

PLEASE WRITE IMMEDIATELY in Persian, Arabic, English, French or your own language:

n  calling on the authorities to release Mohammad Mostafaei immediately and unconditionally, if he has been arrested solely for his human rights activities and the peaceful exercise of his right to freedom of expression and  association, and is therefore a prisoner of conscience;

n  urging them to allow him immediate access to his family, a lawyer of his choice and any medical treatment he may require, and ensure that he is protected from all forms of torture or other ill-treatment;

n  calling on the authorities to allow peaceful demonstrations by those who wish to express their opinions on the elections to take place.

 

PLEASE SEND APPEALS BEFORE 10 August 2009 TO:

Title   

Leader of the Islamic Republic

Ayatollah Sayed ‘Ali Khamenei

The Office of the Supreme Leader

Islamic Republic Street – End of Shahid Keshvar Doust Street, Tehran, Islamic Republic of Iran

Email:                info_leader@leader.ir

via website: http://www.leader.ir/langs/en/index.php?p=letter (English)

http://www.leader.ir/langs/fa/index.php?p=letter

(Persian)

Salutation: Your Excellency

 

Title   

Head of the Judiciary

Ayatollah Mahmoud Hashemi Shahroudi

Howzeh Riyasat-e Qoveh Qazaiyeh (Office of the Head of the Judiciary)

Pasteur St., Vali Asr Ave., south of Serah-e Jomhouri, Tehran 1316814737, Islamic Republic of Iran

Email:              shahroudi@dadgostary-tehran.ir

(In the subject line write: FAO Ayatollah Shahroudi)

Salutation: Your Excellency

 

 

Also send copies to diplomatic representatives accredited to your country.

Please check with your section office if sending appeals after the above date.

 

Posted by StopChildExecutions.com at 22:14:53 | Permalink | No Comments »

Friday, June 19, 2009

Saudi’s to execute 4 Iraqi juveniles

Four Iraqi youths could be executed at any moment. None have enjoyed legal aid or a fair trial.

PUBLIC
AI Index: MDE 23/019/2009

UA 157/09
Death Penalty / Alleged juvenile offenders
18 June 2009

SAUDI ARABIA
Raid Halassa Sakit (m), aged about 20, Iraqi national
Abbas Fadil Abbas (m), aged 20, Iraqi national
Othman Ali (m), aged 20, Iraqi national
Aqil Matsher (m), aged 22, Iraqi national

The four Iraqi nationals named above are at risk of imminent execution for alleged offences reported to have been committed while they were below the age of 18. They were convicted and sentenced to death after unfair trials. All four were not given legal assistance or representation and they were sentenced after secret and summary trials. They all claim that they are innocent. They are held in Rafha prison, near the border with Iraq.

According to information received by Amnesty International, Raid Halassa Sakit was arrested and detained by the General Intelligence in the town of Rafha in 2005. He was charged and tried for drug-related offences and for links with armed groups in Iraq. He had been around 16 years old at the time of these alleged crimes. He was allegedly tortured by being subjected to electric shocks and then beaten until he signed a “confession” which, because he is illiterate, he could not read.

Raid Halassa Sakit was tried in secret without legal assistance by the Criminal Court in Rafha and was initially sentenced to five years’ imprisonment. According to a report received by Amnesty International, when the judge announced the sentence Raid Halassa Sakit insisted on his innocence, to which the judge apparently replied, “You had signed”, referring to the fact that he had signed a “confession”. When Raid Halassa Sakit told the judge that he had signed because of the torture the judge told him, “Such talk is of no benefit to you now”. When he was brought back to the same court two months later he was told that the Court of Cassation in Riyadh had increased the sentence to 20 years’ imprisonment. A month later Raid Halassa Sakit was again brought back to the Criminal Court in Rafha and informed that he was sentenced to death.

Because of the secrecy of the criminal justice system in Saudi Arabia, Amnesty International has been unable to obtain extensive details about the cases of the other three men. However, the organization has received reports that they were all aged between 15 and 18 at the time of their alleged crimes. Othman Ali and Aqil Matsher were arrested in 2004 and would have been around 15 years and 17 years old respectively at the time. Abbas Fadil Abbas is also reported to have been under 18 at the time of his arrest.

Prisoners in Saudi Arabia may be put to death without a scheduled date for execution being made known to them or their families. The four alleged juvenile offenders could be executed at any time.

BACKGROUND INFORMATION

Saudi Arabia is a state party to the Convention on the Rights of the Child, which expressly prohibits the execution of juvenile offenders – those convicted of crimes committed when they were under 18. However, Saudi Arabia continues to execute alleged juvenile offenders in breach of their obligations under international law (see press release issued on 11 May 2009, Saudi Arabia: Two juveniles executed by Saudi Arabian authorities among a group of five at http://www.amnesty.org/en/for-media/press-releases/saudi-arabia-two-juveniles-executed-saudi-authorities-among-group-five-2).

At least 158 people, including 76 foreign nationals, were executed by the Saudi Arabian authorities in 2007, and at least 102 people, including almost 40 foreign nationals, were executed in 2008. Since the beginning of 2009, a further 42 people are known to have been executed.

Saudi Arabia applies the death penalty for a wide range of offences. Court proceedings fall far short of international standards for fair trial. Defendants are rarely allowed formal representation by a lawyer, and in many cases are not informed of the progress of legal proceedings against them. They may be convicted solely on the basis of confessions obtained under duress or deception.

In a recent report on the use of the death penalty in Saudi Arabia, Amnesty International highlighted the extensive use of the death penalty as well as the disproportionately high number of executions of foreign nationals from developing countries. For further information please see Saudi Arabia: Affront to Justice: Death Penalty in Saudi Arabia (Index: MDE 23/027/2008), published on 14 October 2008: http://www.amnesty.org/en/news-and-updates/report/saudi-arabia-executions-target-foreign-nationals-20081014

RECOMMENDED ACTION: Write a personally-worded appeal in Arabic, English or your own language

- urging the authorities to halt the execution of Raid Halassa Sakit, Abbas Fadil Abbas, Othman Ali and Aqil Matsher, all of whom may have been under 18 at the time of their alleged crimes;

- calling on the authorities to commute the death sentences of Raid Halassa Sakit, Abbas Fadil Abbas, Othman Ali and Aqil Matsher, particularly given Saudi Arabia’s obligations as a state party to the Convention on the Rights of the Child;

- reminding the authorities that they should act in accordance with international law, particularly Article 37 of the Convention of the Rights of the Child, and end the use of the death penalty against juvenile offenders.

APPEALS TO:

His Majesty King ‘Abdullah Bin ‘Abdul ‘Aziz Al-Saud
The Custodian of the two Holy Mosques
Office of His Majesty the King
Royal Court
Riyadh, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia
Fax: (via Ministry of the Interior) 011 966 1 403 1185 (can be hard to reach)
Salutation: Your Majesty

His Royal Highness Prince Naif bin ‘Abdul ‘Aziz Al-Saud
Second Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of the Interior
Ministry of the Interior
P.O. Box 2933, Airport Road
Riyadh 11134, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia
Fax: 011 966 1 403 1185 (can be hard to reach)
Salutation: Your Royal Highness

COPIES TO:

Mr Abdullah Saleh A. Al Awwad
Chargé d’Affaires, Royal Embassy of Saudi Arabia
201 Sussex Drive
Ottawa, Ontario K1N 1K6
Fax: (613) 237-0567

Mr Bandar Mohammed Abdullah Al Aiban
President, Human Rights Commission
P.O. Box 58889, King Fahad Road, Building No. 373
Riyadh 11515, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia
Fax: 011 966 1 461 2061
Email: hrc@haq-ksa.org 

Posted by StopChildExecutions.com at 05:33:25 | Permalink | No Comments »

Sunday, November 2, 2008

13 year old girl stoned to death in Somalia

Source: Amnesty International

A girl stoned to death in Somalia this week was 13 years old, not 23,
contrary to earlier news reports. She had been accused of adultery in
breach of Islamic law.

Aisha Ibrahim Duhulow was killed on Monday 27 October, by a group of 50
men in a stadium in the southern port of Kismayu, in front of around
1,000 spectators. Somali journalists who had reported she was 23 have
told Amnesty International that they judged her age by her physical
appearance.

Inside the stadium, militia members opened fire when some of the
witnesses to the killing attempted to save her life, and shot dead a boy
who was a bystander. An al-Shabab spokeperson was later reported to have
apologized for the death of the child, and said the militia member would
be punished.

At one point during the stoning, Amnesty International has been told by
numerous eyewitnesses that nurses were instructed to check whether Aisha
Ibrahim Duhulow was still alive when buried in the ground. They removed
her from the ground, declared that she was, and she was replaced in the
hole where she had been buried for the stoning to continue.
 
Aisha Ibrahim Duhulow was accused of adultery, but sources told Amnesty
International that she had in fact been raped by three men, and had
attempted to report this rape to the al-Shabab militia who control
Kismayo. It was this act that resulted in her being accused of adultery
and detained. None of men she accused of rape were arrested.

She was detained by militia of the Kismayo authorities, a coalition of
Al-shabab and clan militias. During this time, she was reportedly
extremely distressed, with some individuals stating she had become
mentally unstable.

Source
http://www.amnesty.org/en/news-and-updates/news/child-of+-13-stoned-to-death-in-somalia-20081031
 
Related article: http://afp.google.com/article/ALeqM5gDlw7zYhGCUujV64GSv-BEJdMkFg

Posted by StopChildExecutions.com at 00:18:15 | Permalink | Comments (2)

Wednesday, October 22, 2008

Amnesty: Iran “mislead public” with “word games”

In a statement by Amnesty international titled “Juveniles still to face the noose: authorities’ word games exposed
 ”
stated:

“Amnesty International deplores the re-affirmation by a senior Iranian judicial official that Iran will continue to judicially execute juvenile offenders, clarifying a misleading statement he made on 16 October.

The organization is concerned that the 16 October statement, which stated that Iran would no longer execute anyone below the age of 18, irrespective of the crime allegedly committed, played with words and was intended to mislead Iranian and international public opinion.”

For the full text of the statement visit: http://www.amnesty.org.au/news/comments/18442/


Posted by StopChildExecutions.com at 15:49:07 | Permalink | No Comments »

Friday, August 15, 2008

Amnesty International URGENT CALL - Amir Amrollahi

PUBLIC  AI Index: MDE 13/114/2008 
  15 August 2008

Further Information on UA 15/08 (MDE 13/009/2008, 18 January 2008) Death Penalty/imminent execution/unfair trial

IRAN  Amir Amrollahi (m), aged 17 or 18

Juvenile offender Amir Amrollahi’s death sentence received final approval from the Head of the Judiciary earlier this month, and judicial officials in Shiraz province have been asked to prepare to carry out his execution. He was sentenced to death for a murder committed when he was 16 years old.

The murder took place in November 2006 during a fight with another boy, who was fatally stabbed. According to his lawyer, who took up his case this year, Amir Amrollahi ran off in a panic after stabbing the boy, who he thought was about to attack him. Medical help did not arrive for half an hour, by which time it was too late. Amir Amrollahi told his father what had happened, the same day, and later presented himself to the police.

His family could not afford adequate legal representation at his trial. According to his new lawyer, the court did not hear that the killing had been unintentional, or that he was prescribed heavy doses of sedatives while in prison awaiting trial. His mental state at the time of the trial was not properly considered.

On 6 August 2007, Branch 5 of Fars province criminal court sentenced him to death, although one of the court advisors had expressed concern about his age and his ability to understand and recognise what was going on. The sentence was upheld by Branch 27 of Supreme Court on 11 October.

BACKGROUND INFORMATION

The execution of juvenile offenders is prohibited by international law. Since 1990 Iran has executed at least 35 juvenile offenders, eight of them in 2007 and four in 2008.

The family of a murder victim have the right either to insist on execution, or to pardon the killer and receive financial compensation. A convicted murderer has no right to seek pardon or commutation from the state, in violation of Article 6(4) of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, to which Iran is a state party.

RECOMMENDED ACTION: Please send appeals to arrive as quickly as possible, in Persian, Arabic, English or your own language:
- calling on the authorities to halt the execution of Amir Amrollahi immediately;
- expressing concern that he was sentenced to death for a crime committed when he was under 18;
- calling on the authorities to commute his death sentence;
- reminding the authorities that Iran is a state party to the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and the Convention on the Rights of the Child, which prohibit the use of the death penalty against people convicted of crimes committed when they were under 18;
- urging the authorities to pass legislation to abolish the death penalty for offences committed by people under the age of 18, so bringing Iran’s domestic law in line with its obligations under international law.

APPEALS TO:

Head of the Judiciary
Ayatollah Mahmoud Hashemi Shahroudi
Howzeh Riyasat-e Qoveh Qazaiyeh / Office of the Head of the Judiciary
Pasteur St., Vali Asr Ave., south of Serah-e Jomhouri, Tehran 1316814737, Islamic Republic of Iran
Email:  
info@dadgostary-tehran.ir (In subject line write: FAO Ayatollah Shahroudi)
Salutation:  Your Excellency

Leader of the Islamic Republic
His Excellency Ayatollah Sayed ‘Ali Khamenei, The Office of the Supreme Leader
Islamic Republic Street - Shahid Keshvar Doust Street
Tehran, Islamic Republic of Iran
Email: 
info@leader.ir
Salutation:  Your Excellency

COPIES TO:

President
His Excellency Mahmoud Ahmadinejad
The Presidency
Palestine Avenue, Azerbaijan Intersection
Tehran, Islamic Republic of Iran
Fax:   +98 21 6 649 5880
Email:   
dr-ahmadinejad@president.ir
(via website)
http://www.president.ir/email/

Director, Human Rights Headquarters of Iran
His Excellency Mohammad Javad Larijani
C/o Office of the Deputy for International Affairs
Ministry of Justice,
Ministry of Justice Building, Panzdah-Khordad (Ark) Square,
Tehran, Islamic Republic of Iran
Fax:   +98 21 5 537 8827 (please keep trying)

and to diplomatic representatives of Iran accredited to your country.

PLEASE SEND APPEALS IMMEDIATELY. Check with the International Secretariat, or your section office, if sending appeals after 26 September 2008.

Posted by StopChildExecutions.com at 20:12:17 | Permalink | No Comments »

Amnesty International UPDATE re: Behnood

PUBLIC  AI Index: MDE 13/117/2008                   15 August 2008

Further Information on UA 114/08 (MDE 13/065/2008, 29 April 2008) and follow-ups (MDE 13/066/2008, 8 May 2008; MDE 13/081/2008, 12 June 2008; MDE 13/101/2008, 25 July 2008) – Imminent execution

IRAN  Behnoud Shojaee (m), aged 20, juvenile offender

Behnoud Shojaee is again in imminent danger of execution: his family was unable to afford the diyeh, or financial compensation, required to obtain a pardon. His execution, which was due to take place on or around 12 August has been postponed until the end of August 2008.

Behnoud Shojaee was sentenced to qesas (retribution) by Branch 74 of the Criminal Court in Tehran on 2 October 2006, after he was found guilty of killing a boy named Omid the previous year, when he was 17. Behnoud Shojaee had no legal representation at his trial.

He was twice granted a stay of execution by the head of the judiciary, Ayatollah Mahmoud Hashemi Shahroudi, to allow time for further negotiations over diyeh between his and Omid’s families. However, although the Omid’s family agreed to reduce the diyeh they demanded, from US$2,085,000 to US$625,000, this is still more than Behnoud Shojaee’s family can afford.

BACKGROUND INFORMATION


Since 1990 Iran has executed at least 35 juvenile offenders, eight of them in 2007 and four in 2008.

The family of a murder victim have the right either to insist on execution, or to pardon the killer and receive financial compensation. A convicted murderer has no right to seek pardon or commutation from the state, in violation of Article 6(4) of the International Covenant of Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR).

The execution of juvenile offenders is prohibited under international law, as stated in Article 6 (5) of the ICCPR and the Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC), of which Iran is a state party to and so has undertaken not to execute anyone for crimes committed when they were under 18.

On 8 July 2008, during a press conference in Geneva, Switzerland, Amnesty International published a joint statement with over 20 other international and regional human rights organizations calling on Iranian authorities to stop imposing the death penalty for crimes committed by juvenile offenders, and to uphold their international obligation to enforce the absolute prohibition on the death penalty in such cases. See Iran: Spare four youths from execution, immediately enforce international prohibition on death penalty for juvenile offenders, available at: http://www.amnesty.org/en/for-media/press-releases/iran-spare-four-youths-execution-immediately-enforce-international-prohi 
 
RECOMMENDED ACTION: Please send appeals to arrive as quickly as possible, in Persian, Arabic, English or your own language:
- expressing concern that Behnoud Shojaee is at risk of execution for a crime committed when he was under 18;
- calling on the authorities to commute his death sentence;
- reminding them that Iran is a state party to both the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and the Convention on the Rights of the Child, which prohibit the use of the death penalty against those under the age of 18 at the time of offence, and that to execute Behnoud Shojaee would therefore be a violation of international law;
- urging the authorities to pass legislation to abolish the death penalty for offences committed by people under the age of 18, so bringing Iran’s domestic law in line with its obligations under international law.

APPEALS TO:

Head of the Judiciary
Ayatollah Mahmoud Hashemi Shahroudi
Howzeh Riyasat-e Qoveh Qazaiyeh / Office of the Head of the Judiciary
Pasteur St., Vali Asr Ave., south of Serah-e Jomhouri, Tehran 1316814737, Islamic Republic of Iran
Email:  
info@dadgostary-tehran.ir (In subject line write: FAO Ayatollah Shahroudi)
Salutation:  Your Excellency

Leader of the Islamic Republic
His Excellency Ayatollah Sayed ‘Ali Khamenei, The Office of the Supreme Leader
Islamic Republic Street - Shahid Keshvar Doust Street
Tehran, Islamic Republic of Iran
Email: 
info@leader.ir
Salutation:  Your Excellency

COPIES TO:

President
His Excellency Mahmoud Ahmadinejad
The Presidency
Palestine Avenue, Azerbaijan Intersection
Tehran, Islamic Republic of Iran
Fax:   +98 21 6 649 5880
Email:   
dr-ahmadinejad@president.ir
(via website)
http://www.president.ir/email/

Director, Human Rights Headquarters of Iran
His Excellency Mohammad Javad Larijani
C/o Office of the Deputy for International Affairs
Ministry of Justice,
Ministry of Justice Building, Panzdah-Khordad (Ark) Square,
Tehran, Islamic Republic of Iran
Fax:   + 98 21 5 537 8827 (please keep trying)

and to diplomatic representatives of Iran accredited to your country.

PLEASE SEND APPEALS IMMEDIATELY. Check with the International Secretariat, or your section office, if sending appeals after 26 September 2008.

Posted by StopChildExecutions.com at 19:37:36 | Permalink | No Comments »

Amnesty International URGENT CALL: Kamal 17 facing execution

AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL         PUBLIC                  
AI Index: MDE 13/115/2008
14 August 2008

UA 228/08                                
Death Penalty

  
IRAN 
Kamal (m), aged 17, barber’s assistant

Seventeen-year-old barber’s assistant Kamal was sentenced to death for murder on 12 April. His death sentence was approved by the Supreme Court at the beginning of August, and his file has since been sent to the Head of the Judiciary for final approval. He is in imminent danger of execution.

According to local press, in the evening of 10 April 2007 Kamal was standing in front of the barber’s shop where he worked with two friends, including the barber’s son, Mehdi. They noticed a man named Shahin verbally harassing a young girl. A fight broke out between Mehdi and Shahin. When Mehdi’s father arrived Shahin pushed him, and Mehdi asked Kamal to get a knife from the shop, which he did. Shahin then attacked Kamal and they both fell to the floor: Shahin was stabbed in the back. The blade hit his heart, and he died in hospital.

Under Article 206 (b) of Iran’s Criminal Code, any killing is classed as “premeditated murder,” and thus attracts a death sentence, “in cases where the murderer intentionally makes an action which is inherently lethal, even if [the murderer] does not intend to kill the person.”

BACKGROUND INFORMATION


Since 1990 Iran has executed at least 35 juvenile offenders, eight of them in 2007 and four in 2008.

The family of a murder victim have the right either to insist on execution, or to pardon the killer and receive financial compensation. A convicted murderer has no right to seek pardon or commutation from the state, in violation of Article 6(4) of the ICCPR.

The execution of juvenile offenders is prohibited under international law. Amnesty International opposes the death penalty in all cases, and supports the global trend away from the use of the death penalty, powerfully expressed in the UN General Assembly’s resolution calling for a worldwide moratorium on executions on 18 December 2007.

On 8 July 2008, during a press conference in Geneva, Switzerland, Amnesty International issued a joint statement with over 20 other international and regional human rights organizations calling on Iranian authorities to stop imposing the death penalty for crimes committed by juvenile offenders, and to uphold their international obligation to enforce the absolute prohibition on the death penalty in such cases. See Iran: Spare four youths from execution, immediately enforce international prohibition on death penalty for juvenile offenders, available at: http://www.amnesty.org/en/for-media/press-releases/iran-spare-four-youths-execution-immediately-enforce-international-prohi
 
RECOMMENDED ACTION: Please send appeals in your own words to arrive as quickly as possible, in Persian, Arabic, English or your own language:

- expressing concern that Kamal is at risk of execution for a crime committed when he was under 18;
- calling on the authorities to commute his death sentence;
- reminding them that Iran is a state party to both the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and the Convention on the Rights of the Child, which prohibit the use of the death penalty against those under the age of 18 at the time of offence, and that to execute Kamal would therefore be a violation of international law;
- urging the authorities to pass legislation to abolish the death penalty for offences committed by people under the age of 18, so bringing Iran’s domestic law in line with its obligations under international law;
- stating that Amnesty International acknowledges the right and responsibility of governments to bring to justice those suspected of criminal offences, but unconditionally opposes the death penalty.

APPEALS TO:

Head of the Judiciary
His Excellency Ayatollah Mahmoud Hashemi Shahroudi
Ministry of Justice, Panzdah Khordad (Ark) Square
Tehran, Islamic Republic of Iran
Email:  
info@dadgostary-tehran.ir (In the subject line: FAO Ayatollah Shahroudi)
Fax: 011 98 21 3390 4986 (may be difficult. If a voice answers, say, “Fax please”)
Salutation:  Your Excellency

Leader of the Islamic Republic
His Excellency Ayatollah Sayed ‘Ali Khamenei, The Office of the Supreme Leader
Islamic Republic Street - Shahid Keshvar Doust Street
Tehran, Islamic Republic of Iran
Email: 
info@leader.ir
Salutation:  Your Excellency

COPIES TO:

President
His Excellency Mahmoud Ahmadinejad
The Presidency
Palestine Avenue, Azerbaijan Intersection
Tehran, Islamic Republic of Iran
Fax:  011 98 21 6 649 5880

Email:   
dr-ahmadinejad@president.ir (via website) http://www.president.ir/email/

Director, Human Rights Headquarters of Iran
His Excellency Mohammad Javad Larijani
C/o Office of the Deputy for International Affairs
Ministry of Justice,
Ministry of Justice Building, Panzdah-Khordad (Ark) Square
Tehran, Islamic Republic of Iran
Fax:  011 98 21 5 537 8827 (may be difficult)

Mr Seyed Mahdi Mohebi
Chargé d’Affaires, Embassy for the Islamic Republic of Iran
245 Metcalfe Street
Ottawa, Ontario K2P 2K2
Fax: (613) 232-5712

Please send appeals immediately.  Thank you.

Posted by StopChildExecutions.com at 02:34:20 | Permalink | No Comments »

Friday, July 25, 2008

Amnesty International urgent call to save Soghra Najafpour

AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL                                                                                                            PUBLIC       
AI Index: MDE13/098/2008       
                                                                                                  25 July 2008

 

Further Information on 271/07 (MDE/124/2007, 23 October 2007) Death Penalty/Fear of Imminent Execution

                                                                                             

IRAN    Soghra Najafpour (f), aged 31

Soghra Najafpour has been sentenced to death, for the second time, for a murder which took place when she was only 13 years old. She is in prison in the northern city of Rasht, where she has spent most of the last 19 years.

 

Soghra Najafpour was released on bail of 600 million Iranian rials (almost US$66,000) on 1 October 2007. She returned to prison later that month to comply with a summons which followed a new demand by the family of the murder victim for her execution to be carried out after they heard of her release.

 

On 23 October 2007, Soghra Najafpour’s lawyer petitioned the Office of the Head of the Judiciary to reinvestigate her case on account of serious flaws, following which her sentence of qesas (retribution) was overturned by the Supreme Court. The case was sent back for retrial in another branch of the General Court in Rasht. At the second trial, she was again found guilty and sentenced to qesas and remains at risk of execution.

 

At the age of nine, Soghra Najafpour was sent by her family to work as a servant in a doctor’s home in the city of Rasht. After Soghra Najafpour had been working for the family for four years, the eight-year-old son of the family went missing. She was accused of the boy’s murder when his body was found in a well a few days later. Soghra Najafpour initially denied the murder, but after repeated interrogation, confessed to committing it. Her confession was taken as proof of her guilt and she was sentenced to qesas.

 

In Soghra Najafpour’s appeal against her sentence she wrote, “I didn’t kill the eight-year-old boy, but I know who killed him and because of his request, I had to be silent. He had promised to get the victim’s mother to forgive me and to save me.” She added, “When I was nine, I was raped, and with the threats I received, I was forced to be silent, and on the day of the accident, I had a storeroom to clean and the same man who abused me came looking for me, and the boy, who was playing, came into the storeroom all of a sudden and saw me being abused. That man threw the boy against the wall and, in one instant, his head hit the wall and he lost consciousness. I couldn’t move the boy’s corpse, but that man wanted me to throw the body in the well.”

 

Her appeal was rejected and following a medical examination, Soghra Najafpour also received a sentence of flogging for fornication, despite her claim to have been raped.  The man she had claimed was her abuser was acquitted because he did not confess to raping her and there was no other evidence to prove he was the perpetrator. 

 

On two occasions, when Soghra Najafpour was 17 and 21, she was taken to be executed but the family of the victim changed their minds at the last minute. Soghra Najafpour will continue to seek to prove her innocence.

 

BACKGROUND INFORMATION

International law strictly prohibits the use of the death penalty against people convicted of crimes committed when they were under 18. As a state party to the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and the Convention on the Rights of the Child, Iran has undertaken not to execute child offenders. However, since 1990, Iran has executed at least 33 child offenders, including at least two in 2008. Almost 140 juvenile offenders are believed to be on death row in Iran, the vast majority convicted of murder.

 

For more information see Iran: The Last Executioner of children (Index MDE 13/059/2007) and Iran: Spare four youths from execution, immediately enforce international prohibition on death penalty for juvenile offenders (http://www.amnesty.org/en/for-media/press-releases/iran-spare-four-youths-execution-immediately-enforce-international-prohi).

 

RECOMMENDED ACTION: Please send appeals to arrive as quickly as possible, in Persian, Arabic, English, French or your own language:

- urging the authorities to overturn the death sentence imposed on Soghra Najafpour, should it be upheld on appeal;
- reminding the authorities that Iran is a state party to the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and the Convention on the Rights of the Child, which prohibit the use of the death penalty against people convicted of crimes committed when they were under 18, and that the execution of Soghra Najafpour would therefore be a violation of international law;
- calling for the authorities to pass legislation to abolish the death penalty for offences committed by anyone under the age of 18, so as to bring Iran’s domestic law into line with its obligations under international law;
- stating that Amnesty International acknowledges the right and responsibility of governments to bring to justice those suspected of criminal offences, but unconditionally opposes the death penalty;
- expressing concern that Soghra Najafpour was flogged for having an illicit relationship after alleging that she was raped repeatedly from the age of nine and urging the authorities to end the practice of flogging, which is a cruel punishment which amounts to torture. Amnesty International is particularly concerned that a child who alleged she was raped was herself prosecuted and punished for committing zina (fornication).

APPEALS TO:

Head of the Judiciary
Ayatollah Mahmoud Hashemi Shahroudi
Howzeh Riyasat-e Qoveh Qazaiyeh / Office of the Head of the Judiciary
Pasteur St., Vali Asr Ave., south of Serah-e Jomhouri, Tehran 1316814737, Islamic Republic of Iran
Email:                    info@dadgostary-tehran.ir (In the subject line write: FAO Ayatollah Shahroudi)
Salutation:          Your Excellency

COPIES TO:

Leader of the Islamic Republic
His Excellency Ayatollah Sayed ‘Ali Khamenei
The Office of the Supreme Leader, Islamic Republic Street - Shahid Keshvar Doust Street
Tehran, Islamic Republic of Iran
Email:                    info@leader.ir
Salutation:          Your Excellency

 

Director, Human Rights Headquarters of Iran
His Excellency Mohammad Javad Larijani
C/o Office of the Deputy for International Affairs
Ministry of Justice,
Ministry of Justice Building, Panzdah-Khordad (Ark) Square,
Tehran, Islamic Republic of Iran

and to diplomatic representatives of Iran accredited to your country.

 

PLEASE SEND APPEALS IMMEDIATELY. Check with the International Secretariat, or your section office, if sending appeals after 05 September.

Posted by StopChildExecutions.com at 19:49:04 | Permalink | No Comments »

Friday, June 13, 2008

Amnesty Update on Mohammad Fadaee

AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL                                                                                                                                    AI Index: MDE 13/082/2008           
                                                                                                                                                                                          12 June 2008
Further Information on UA 146/08 (MDE 13/074/2008, 30 May 2008) - Imminent execution/legal concern
IRAN                              Mohammad Feda’i (m), aged 21, juvenile offender



Juvenile offender Mohammad Feda’i was granted a one-month reprieve on 10 June, the day before he was scheduled to be executed, to allow time for his family to negotiate with the family of the boy he was convicted of killing, and to agree on financial compensation in exchange for pardoning him.
Mohammad Feda’i had been due to be executed on 18 April 2007, but his execution was stayed because he had received inadequate legal
representation during his trial. His request for a retrial was rejected, and his execution was rescheduled for 11 June.
In a recent letter made public on 7 June, Mohammad Feda’i said that officials had kicked and tortured him, to the point that one night he agreed to sign – by way of a fingerprint - a confession without knowledge of its content. In his letter he wrote, “I was beaten and flogged repeatedly … They hanged me from the ceiling [and] left me with no hope of living.” The courts had taken no account of the fact that Mohammad Feda’i had only confessed after being tortured.

BACKGROUND INFORMATION

As a state party to both the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) and the Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC), Iran has undertaken not to execute people convicted of crimes committed when they were under the age of 18. However, since 1990 Iran has executed at least 30 juvenile offenders, seven of them in 2007 and two in 2008.
A Kurdish boy, Mohammad Hassanzadeh, believed to be aged 16 or 17, was hanged in Sanandaj prison on 10 June. He had been convicted of murdering a 10-year-old boy; he had been aged about 15 at the time (see Kurdish boy executed in Iran, at: http://www.amnesty.org/en/news-and-updates/news/kurdish-boy-executed-iran-20080611). Another juvenile offender, Javad Shoja’i, was executed in the central city of Esfahan on 26 February. He had been sentenced to qesas (retribution) for a murder carried out when he was 16.
At least 85, and possibly many more, other juvenile offenders are now on death row in Iran. The execution of juvenile offenders is prohibited under international law. Amnesty International opposes the death penalty in all cases, and supports the global trend away from the use of the death penalty, powerfully expressed in the UN General Assembly’s resolution calling for a worldwide moratorium on executions on 18 December 2007.
For more information about executions of juvenile offenders in Iran, please see: Iran: The last executioner of children (MDE 13/059/2007, June 2007), http://web.amnesty.org/library/index/engmde130592007.
For more information about the reprieve handed down to Mohammad Feda’i on 10 June, see Iran: Reprieve should be first step in ending juvenile executions (11 June 2008), http://www.amnesty.org/en/for-media/press-releases/iran-reprieve-should-be-first-step-ending-juvenile-executions-20080611

RECOMMENDED ACTION: Please send appeals to arrive as quickly as possible, in Persian, English or your own language:

- welcoming the stay of execution granted to Mohammad Feda’i;
- calling on the authorities to commute his death sentence, as he is facing execution for a crime committed when he was under 18;
- pointing out that in a letter made public on 7 June Mohammad Feda’i described how he had been tortured and how he was forced to confess, both of which are strictly illegal under Iranian and international human rights law;
- acknowledging that governments have a right and responsibility to bring to justice those suspected of criminal offences in proceedings that meet international standards for fair trial, but pointing out that the death penalty is the ultimate cruel, inhuman and degrading punishment;
- reminding them that Iran is a state party to both the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) and the Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC), which prohibits the use of the death penalty against those under the age of 18 at the time of offence, and that the execution of Mohammad Feda’i would therefore be a violation of international law.

APPEALS TO:

Leader of the Islamic Republic
His Excellency Ayatollah Sayed ‘Ali Khamenei
The Office of the Supreme Leader
Islamic Republic Street - Shahid Keshvar Doust Street
Tehran, Islamic Republic of Iran
Email:                    info@leader.ir
Salutation:          Your Excellency
Head of the Judiciary
Ayatollah Mahmoud Hashemi Shahroudi
Howzeh Riyasat-e Qoveh Qazaiyeh / Office of the Head of the Judiciary
Pasteur St., Vali Asr Ave., south of Serah-e Jomhouri, Tehran 1316814737, Islamic Republic of Iran
Email:                    info@dadgostary-tehran.ir (In the subject line write: FAO Ayatollah Shahroudi)
Salutation:          Your Excellency
COPIES TO:
President
His Excellency Mahmoud Ahmadinejad
The Presidency, Palestine Avenue, Azerbaijan Intersection, Tehran, Islamic Republic of Iran
Email:                    dr-ahmadinejad@president.ir
via website: www.president.ir/email
and to diplomatic representatives of Iran accredited to your country.
PLEASE SEND APPEALS IMMEDIATELY. Check with the International Secretariat, or your section office, if sending appeals after 24 July 2008.

Posted by StopChildExecutions.com at 22:06:16 | Permalink | Comments (1) »

Amnesty Update on Behnoud Shojaee

AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL                                                                                                                                            AI Index: MDE 13/081/2008           
                                                                                                                                                                                          12 June 2008
Further Information on UA 114/08 (MDE 13/065/2008, 29 April 2008) and follow-up (MDE 13/066/2008, 08 May 2008) - imminent execution
IRAN                                  Behnoud Shojaee (m), aged 20, juvenile offender



Juvenile offender Behnoud Shojaee was granted a one-month reprieve on 10 June, the day before he was scheduled for execution, to allow time for his family to negotiate financial compensation with the family of the boy he was convicted of stabbing to death, in exchange for a pardon.
This is the second time his execution has been postponed: he remains at risk of being executed unless the families can agree on compensation.

BACKGROUND INFORMATION

As a state party to both the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) and the Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC), Iran has undertaken not to execute people convicted of crimes committed when they were under the age of 18. However, since 1990 Iran has executed at least 30 juvenile offenders, seven of them in 2007 and two in 2008.
A Kurdish boy believed to be 16 or 17 years old was hanged in Sanandaj prison on 10 June 2008. He had been convicted of the murder of another boy, aged 10. He had been about 15 at the time (see Kurdish boy executed in Iran, at: http://www.amnesty.org/en/news-and-updates/news/kurdish-boy-executed-iran-20080611 ). On 26 February 2008 Javad Shoja’i, who was sentenced to qesas, or retribution, for a murder he carried out at the age of 16, was executed in the central city of Esfahan.
At least 85 other juvenile offenders, possibly many more, are now on death row in Iran. The execution of juvenile offenders is prohibited under international law. Amnesty International opposes the death penalty in all cases, and supports the global trend away from the use of the death penalty, powerfully expressed in the UN General Assembly’s resolution calling for a worldwide moratorium on executions on 18 December 2007.
The family of a murder victim have the right either to insist on execution, or to pardon the killer and receive financial compensation. A convicted murderer has no right to seek pardon or commutation from the state, in violation of Article 6(4) of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights.
For more information about executions of juvenile offenders in Iran, please see: Iran: The last executioner of children (MDE 13/059/2007, June 2007), http://web.amnesty.org/library/index/engmde130592007.
For more information about the reprieve handed down to Behnoud Shojaee on 10 June, see Iran: Reprieve should be first step in ending juvenile executions (11 June 2008), http://www.amnesty.org/en/for-media/press-releases/iran-reprieve-should-be-first-step-ending-juvenile-executions-20080611

RECOMMENDED ACTION: Please send appeals to arrive as quickly as possible, in Persian, Arabic, English or your own language:

- welcoming the stay of execution of Behnoud Shojaee;
- calling on the authorities to commute his death sentence, as he is facing execution for a crime committed when he was under 18;
- acknowledging that governments have a right and responsibility to bring to justice those suspected of criminal offences in proceedings that meet international standards for fair trial, but pointing out that no one should be executed for crimes committed when under 18 and that the death penalty is the ultimate cruel, inhuman and degrading punishment;
- calling on the authorities to pass, as a matter of urgency, legislation abolishing the death penalty for all offences committed by those under 18, in accordance with Iran’s obligations as a state party to the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and the Convention on the Rights of the Child.

APPEALS TO:

Leader of the Islamic Republic
His Excellency Ayatollah Sayed ‘Ali Khamenei
The Office of the Supreme Leader
Islamic Republic Street - Shahid Keshvar Doust Street
Tehran, Islamic Republic of Iran
Email:                    info@leader.ir
Salutation:          Your Excellency
Head of the Judiciary
Ayatollah Mahmoud Hashemi Shahroudi
Howzeh Riyasat-e Qoveh Qazaiyeh / Office of the Head of the Judiciary
Pasteur St., Vali Asr Ave., south of Serah-e Jomhouri, Tehran 1316814737, Islamic Republic of Iran
Email:                    info@dadgostary-tehran.ir (In the subject line write: FAO Ayatollah Shahroudi)
Salutation:          Your Excellency
COPIES TO:
President
His Excellency Mahmoud Ahmadinejad
The Presidency, Palestine Avenue, Azerbaijan Intersection, Tehran, Islamic Republic of Iran
Email:                    dr-ahmadinejad@president.ir OR via website: www.president.ir/email
and to diplomatic representatives of Iran accredited to your country.
PLEASE SEND APPEALS IMMEDIATELY. Check with the International Secretariat, or your section office, if sending appeals 24 July 2008.

Posted by StopChildExecutions.com at 22:04:39 | Permalink | Comments (1) »

Thursday, June 12, 2008

Amnesty International deplores execution of Iranian boy

 
AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL
Public Statement
AI Index: MDE 13/080/2008    (Public)
11 June 2008
Iran : Amnesty International deplores the execution of Kurdish boy
Amnesty International unreservedly condemns the execution yesterday, 10 June 2008, of Mohammad Hassanzadeh, a Kurdish boy believed to be 16 or 17 years old at the time of execution. Mohammad Hassanzadeh was hanged in Sanandaj prison following his conviction for the murder, when aged about 15, of another boy, then aged 10. A 60 year-old man, Rahim Pashabadi, also convicted of murder, was executed alongside him.

This latest execution of a juvenile offender is yet another blatant violation by the Iranian authorities of their international obligations under the UN’s International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and the Convention on the Rights of the Child not to sentence to death those under the age of 18 at the time of the offence. It runs against hopes created by yesterday’s decision by the Head of Iran’s Judiciary to grant a one month reprieve to two juvenile offenders to allow more time to seek a resolution with the families of the victims.
Amnesty International has recorded the names of at least 85 other juvenile offenders at risk of execution in Iran , and fears there may be many others also at risk, like Mohammad Hassanzadeh, whose case was not previously known to the organisation. Iran remains by far the most prolific executioner of juvenile offenders. In recent years, only two other countries – Saudi Arabia and Yemen – have carried out such executions.
The organization urges the Iranian authorities to immediately stop sentencing juvenile offenders to death and commute the sentences of these on death row.
Background
On 9 June, reports from Iran indicated that 11 individuals, including two juvenile offenders, would be executed today, 11 June 2008. While the two juvenile offenders, both now over the age of 20, were granted a reprieve on Tuesday, Fars news agency reported that eight men were hanged today, 11 June, in Tehran ’s Evin Prison. So far in 2008, Amnesty International has recorded 128 executions; the true figure could be considerably higher.

At least one other juvenile offender has been executed in 2008. On 26 February 2008 Javad Shoja’i, who was sentenced to qesas, or retribution, for a murder he carried out at the age of 16, was executed in the central city of Esfahan . In 2007, Iran executed at least seven individuals who were sentenced to death for crimes carried out while they were under the age of 18.

Posted by StopChildExecutions.com at 02:43:01 | Permalink | No Comments »

Sunday, June 1, 2008

URGENT: Mohammad Fada’i facing imminent execution

AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL
PUBLIC         - AI Index: MDE 13/074/2008                  

30 May 2008
UA 146/08 - Imminent execution/ legal concern        
IRAN        Mohammad Feda’i (m) aged 21, juvenile offender

Mohammad Feda’i is facing imminent execution for a murder committed when he was 17 years old. He was convicted after an unfair trial. Iran is a state party to international treaties including the Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC), which expressly prohibit the execution of those below the age of 18 at the time of the commission of the offence. According to news reports, he is scheduled to be executed on or around 11 June.

On 21 April 2004, Mohammad Feda’i attended a snooker club with his friends in Robat Karim, a town near the city of Karaj, in Tehran province, when one of his friends was involved in a fight with a group of about 17 young men. According to his testimony, Mohammad Feda’i tried to break up the fight, but a boy named Said started to hit him with a piece of wood. Mohammad Feda’i, who was holding a knife handed to him by one of his friends, then, according to his account, fell over. As Said was about to hit him again, he fatally stabbed Said once in self defence. Said was transferred to hospital, where died three hours later.

The case went before Branch 71 of the Tehran Criminal Court and Mohammad Feda’i was sentenced to qesas (retribution) for the murder of Said on 12 March 2005. Although the five sentencing judges in his case found Mohammad Feda’i guilty, they also acknowledged in their written verdict that the stabbing was an act of self-defence and that he had not been adequately represented at his trial, as his first legal representative was not an accredited lawyer, and two lawyers hired later had only submitted one written defence statement to the court during his trial. Nevertheless, the death sentence against Mohammad Feda’i was upheld by Branch 27 of the Supreme Court, and has been approved by the Head of the Judiciary.

Mohammad Feda’i had been due to be executed on 18 April 2007. However, the execution was stayed on the basis of the inadequate legal representation during his trial. A subsequent request to the Attorney General for a retrial was rejected, and a new execution date was set.

BACKGROUND INFORMATION
As a state party to both the CRC and the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR), Iran has undertaken not to execute juvenile offenders: those convicted of crimes committed when they were under the age of 18. However, since 1990 Iran has executed at least 28 juvenile offenders, six of them in 2007. At least 85 juvenile offenders are now on death row in Iran. This number may be even higher as at least a further 15 people are believed to have been sentenced to death. For more information about executions of juvenile offenders in Iran, please see: Iran: The last executioner of children (MDE 13/059/2007, June 2007), http://web.amnesty.org/library/index/engmde130592007.

Amnesty International opposes the death penalty in all cases, and supports the global trend away from the use of the death penalty, powerfully expressed in the UN General Assembly’s resolution calling for a worldwide moratorium on executions on 18 December 2007.

RECOMMENDED ACTION: Please send appeals to arrive as quickly as possible, in Persian, English or your own language:
- calling on the authorities to commute the death sentence passed on Mohammad Feda’i, who is at imminent risk of execution for a crime committed when he was under the age of 18;
- noting that he had inadequate legal representation at his trial, meaning that proceedings did not meet international fair trial standards;
- urging the Iranian authorities to review Mohammad Feda’i’s case;
- reminding them that Iran is a state party to both the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) and the Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC), which prohibits the use of the death penalty against those under the age of 18 at the time of offence, and that the execution of Mohammad Feda’i would therefore be a violation of international law.
 
APPEALS TO:
Leader of the Islamic Republic
His Excellency Ayatollah Sayed ‘Ali Khamenei
The Office of the Supreme Leader
Islamic Republic Street - Shahid Keshvar Doust Street
Tehran, Islamic Republic of Iran
Email:                 info@leader.ir
Salutation:         Your Excellency

Head of the Judiciary
Ayatollah Mahmoud Hashemi Shahroudi
Howzeh Riyasat-e Qoveh Qazaiyeh / Office of the Head of the Judiciary
Pasteur St., Vali Asr Ave., south of Serah-e Jomhouri, Tehran 1316814737, Islamic Republic of Iran
Email:                 info@dadgostary-tehran.ir (In the subject line write: FAO Ayatollah Shahroudi)
Salutation:         Your Excellency

COPIES TO:
President
His Excellency Mahmoud Ahmadinejad
The Presidency, Palestine Avenue, Azerbaijan Intersection, Tehran, Islamic Republic of Iran
Email:                 dr-ahmadinejad@president.ir OR via website: www.president.ir/email

and to diplomatic representatives of Iran accredited to your country.

PLEASE SEND APPEALS IMMEDIATELY.

Posted by StopChildExecutions.com at 22:54:49 | Permalink | No Comments »

Wednesday, May 28, 2008

گزارش های عفو بین الملل ايران

ایران

جمهوری اسلامی ایران
رئيس کشور: رهبر جمهوری اسلامی ایران: آیت الله سید علی خامنه ای
رئيس دولت: رییس جمهور دکتر محمود احمدی نژاد
مجازات مرگ: اعمال می‌شود
جمعیت: 71/2 میلیون
عمر قابل انتظار: 70/2 سال
محقوق بشری رگ و میر زیر پنج سال (پسر- دختر): 31-32 در هزار
سواد بزرگسالان: 82/4 درصد
مقامات به سركوب مخالفان ادامه داده‌اند.  روزنامه‌نگاران، نویسندگان، دانشمندان، و فعالان حقوق زنان و جامعه در معرض دستگیری‌های خودسرانه، ممنوعیت سفر، تعطیل ان‌جی‌او‌های آنان و آزار بوده‌اند.  مخالفت مسلحانه، عمدتا به وسیله گروه‌های كرد و بلوچ، همراه با سركوب حكومتی جوامع اقلیت ادامه یافت.  تبعیض علیه زنان در قانون و عمل تثبیت شده است.  شكنجه و سایر بدرفتاری‌ها در زندان‌ها و بازداشت‌گاه‌ها گسترده بود.  یك شدت عمل امنیتی كه در آوریل اعلام شد به افزایش شدیدی از اعدام منجر شد: دست كم 335 نفر اعدام شدند، كه هفت تن از آنان بزهكاران خردسال بودند.  احكام اعدام به وسیله سنگسار، قطع عضو و شلاق هم‌چنان صادر شد و به مرحله اجرا درآمد.
پس‌زمینه
برنامه غنی‌سازی هسته‌ای ایران هم‌چنان یك كانون‌ تنش‌ بین‌المللی بود.  مقامات اسرائیل و آمریكا از نفی امكان حمله نظامی علیه ایران خودداری كردند.  در ماه مارس، شورای امنیت سازمان ملل تحریم‌های بیشتری وضع كرد.  در سپتامبر، حكومت آمریكا سپاه پاسداران انقلاب ایران را به خاطر حمایت‌های ادعایی از شورشیان عراق و افغانستان، یك «سازمان تروریستی» اعلام كرد.  در دسامبر، سازمان‌های اطلاعاتی آمریكا گزارشی را منتشر كردند حاكی از این كه ایران در سال 2003 همه برنامه‌های سلاح هسته‌ای خود را قطع كرده است.  در همان ماه، مجمع عمومی سازمان ملل وضعیت حقوق بشر در ایران را محكوم كرد.
آیت‌الله مشكینی، رییس مجلس خبرگان كه بر انتصاب رهبر انقلاب نظارت دارد، در ماه ژوئیه درگذشت.  مقام او را رییس جمهور سابق هاشمی رفسنجانی گرفته است.
با خراب شدن وضعیت اقتصادی كشور، تعداد فزاینده‌ای از ایرانیان با فقر روبرو شده‌اند.  در ماه ژوئن، جیره‌بندی بنزین به شورش منجر شد.  یك اعتصاب سه ماهه كارگران كارخانه شكر هفت تپه در استان خوزستان به خاطر عدم پرداخت حقوق و مزایا در ماه اكتبر با زور به وسیله نیروهای امنیتی در هم شكسته شد.  كارگران هفت تپه و سایر گروه‌های كارگری و معلمان تظاهرات مفصلی به راه انداختند و عده‌ای دستگیر شدند.

آزادی بيان
قوانین حاوی تعبیرات مبهم و عملیات سختگیرانه، سركوب گسترده مخالفت مسالمت‌آمیز را به دنبال داشته است.  تظاهرات غالبا به دستگیری‌های گروهی و محاكمات ناعادلانه منجر شده است.  مقامات محدودیت‌های تنگی بردسترسی به اینترنت برقرار كرده‌اند.  روزنامه‌نگاران، دانشگاهیان و وبلاگ‌نویسان، از جمله افرادی با ملیت‌ دوگانه، دستگیر و به زندان یا شلاق محكوم شدند، و چندین نشریه تعطیل شد.  در ماه آوریل، غلامحسین اژه‌ای، وزیر اطلاعات، علنا دانشجویان و جنبش زنان را به این كه بخشی از یك تلاش برای «براندازی‌نرم» حكومت ایران هستند متهم كرد.
·                    در ماه اكتبر، روزنامه‌نگارعلی‌فرحبخش پس از 11 ماه بازداشت به طور مشروط زودتر از موقع آزاد شد.  او در رابطه با حضورش در یك كنفرانس رسانه‌ای در تایلند، به «جاسوسی» و «دریافت پول از خارجیان» مجرم شناخته شده بود.

مدافعان حقوق بشر
گروه‌های مستقل حقوق بشر و سایر ان‌جی‌اوها هم‌چنان برای ثبت نام رسمی با تأخیر‌های طولانی، كه غالبا به سال‌ها می‌رسد، روبرو بودند و از این رو به خاطر انجام اقدامات غیر قانونی در خطر تعطیلی قرار داشتند.  دانشجویانی كه برای احترام بیشتر به حقوق بشر مبارزه می‌كردند با عملیات تلافی‌جویانه، از جمله دستگیری‌های خودسرانه و شكنجه روبرو بودند.  مدافعان فردی حقوق بشر به خاطر فعالیتشان تحت سركوب قرار گرفتند و برخی از آنان زندانی وجدان بودند.
*   عمادالدین باقی، رییس انجمن دفاع از حقوق زندانیان و ی‍ك مبارز برجسته علیه مجازات اعدام، در ماه اكتبر پس از این كه به اتهام «به خطر انداختن امنیت كشور» احضار شده بود بازداشت شد.  وقتی كه خانواده او وثیقه آماده كردند به آنان گفته شد كه او باید یك حكم زندان تعلیقی در سال 2003 را كه از جمله به خاطر «نشر اكاذیب» صادر شده بود بگذراند.  یك زندان سه ساله دیگر در ژوئیه 2007 به دلیل «تبلیغ برای دشمنان نظام» به خاطر فعالیت او در مورد عرب‌های اهوازی‌ ایران كه پس از محاكمات ناعادلانه به مرگ محكوم شده بودند، صادر شد و در جریان تجدید نظر بود.  همسر او، فاطمه كمالی احمد سرایی و دخترش مریم باقی پس از شركت در یك كارگاه حقوق بشر در دوبی در 2004 به دلیل «دیدار و تبانی به قصد اخلال در امنیت كشور» در ماه اكتبر به سه سال زندان تعلیقی‌ محكوم شدند.  در ماه دسامبر، او در زندان به یك حمله قلبی دچار شد. 
*   منصور اوسانلو رییس اتحادیه كارگران شركت اتوبوسرانی تهران و حومه در ماه ژوئیه پس از این كه به منظور كسب حمایت برای جنبش سندیكای مستقل كارگری ایران به اروپا سفر كرده بود بازداشت شد.  پس از اعتراضات بین‌المللی، او برای صدمه‌ای كه به قرار اطلاع در یك بازداشت پیشین از سوی مأموران زندان به چشمش وارد شده بود، تحت مداوا قرار گرفت.  در ماه اكتبر، یك دادگاه تجدید نظر محكومیت زندان پنج ساله‌ای را كه برای‌ او در فوریه صادر شده بود تأیید كرد.

تبعیض علیه زنان
زنان هم‌چنان در قانون و عمل با تبعیضات گسترده ای روبرو بودند.  هزاران نفر به خاطر عدم رعایت مقررات اجباری حجاب دستگیر شدند.
فعالان كمپین برای برابری، كه جمع‌آوری یك میلیون امضا برای پایان بخشیدن به تبعیضات قانونی علیه زنان را دنبال می‌كند، با آزار و دستگیری روبرو بودند.  در ماه اوت، نسیم سرابندی و فاطمه دهدشتی به خاطر «اقدام علیه امنیت كشور از طریق پخش اكاذیب علیه نظام» به شش ماه زندان تعلیق شده برای دوسال محكوم شدند.  اینان اولین كسانی بودند كه به خاطر جمع‌آوری امضا محاكمه و محكوم شدند.  در پایان سال، چهار فعال بدون محاكمه در زندان به سر می‌بردند - روناك صفار زاده و هانا عبدی دو زن كرد كه به ترتبب در ماه‌های اكتبر و نوامبر در سنندج دستگیر شده بودند، و مریم حسین‌خواه و جلوه جواهری كه در رابطه با كارشان در ویراستاری پایگاه اینترنتی كمپین در تهران دستگیر شده‌اند.  مقامات مرتبا پایگاه را فیلتر می‌كردند و دسترسی به آن را مشكل می‌ساختند. 
محكومیت 30 ماهه زندان دلارام علی، مدافع حقوق زنان، كه در ژوئن 2006 به دنبال یك تظاهرات مسالمت‌آمیز با خواست احترام بیشتر به حقوق زنان دستگیر شده بود، پس از یك پیكار داخلی و جهانی به تعویق افتاد.  در ماه مارس، 33 فعال زن در جلو دادگاه انقلاب تهران، در جریان اعتراض علیه محاكمه پنج زن كه در رابطه با تظاهرات ژوئن 2006 تحت محاكمه قرار داشتند، دستگیر شدند.  همه آنان بعدا آزاد شدند، ولی‌ برخی از آنان دادگاهی شدند.

سركوب اقلیت‌ها
سركوب اقلیت‌های قومی كه برای شناخت بیشتر حقوق فرهنگی و سیاسی خود مبارزه می‌كنند‌ هم‌چنان ادامه یافت.
عرب ها
دست كم هشت عرب اهوازی ایرانی پس از این كه در رابطه با انفجار بمب در خوزستان در سال 2005 مجرم شناخته شده بودند اعدام گردیدند.  دست كم 17 عرب دیگر، بنا به گزارش، پس از محاكمات ناعادلانه در رابطه با بمب‌گذاری‌ها به اعدام محكوم شده‌اند.  بنا به گزارش‌ها، در ماه آوریل، در آستانه سالگرد شورش‌های سال 2005 كه در اعتراض به نامه‌ای صورت گرفت كه بنا به ادعا از سوی یك مشاور ریاست جمهوری نوشته شده بود و صحت آن از طرف او تكذیب گردید، و حاوی سیاست‌هایی برای كاهش دادن جمعیت عرب خوزستان بود، ده‌ها و احتمالا صدها نفر از عرب‌های اهوازی دستگیر شدند.
*   در ماه آوریل، محمد حسن فلاحیه به خاطر نوشتن مقاله‌ای انتقادی از حكومت و اتهام تماس با گروه‌های مخالف مستقر در خارج كشور به سه سال زندان با اعمال شاقه محكوم شد.  او در نوامبر 2006 بازداشت شده بود و در تمام مراحل دادرسی از دسترسی به وكیل محروم بود.  خانواده او گفتند كه مقامات زندان اوین اجازه ندادند كه داروهای مورد نیاز او را كه برای ناراحتی‌های قلبی و خونی‌ او لازم است به او برسانند و از این رو حیات او را در خطر قرار داده‌اند.
آذربایجانی‌ها
در 21 فوریه، صدها فعال آذربایجانی ایرانی در رابطه با تظاهرات مسالمت‌آمیز به مناسبت روز جهانی زبان مادری دستگیر شدند.  تظاهركنندگان خواهان آن بودند كه زبان خودشان در مدارس و سایر نهادهای آموزشی در مناطق شمال غربی ایران كه بیشتر آذربایجانیان ایرانی در آنجا سكونت دارند به كار گرفته شود.
*     زندانی وجدان صالح كامرانی، یك حقوقدان و مدافع حقوق  بشر، بین ماه‌های اوت و دسامبر در زندان اوین بازداشت شده بود.  در سپتامبر 2006، او به خاطر «پخش تبلیغات علیه نظام» به یك سال زندان محكوم شد كه برای پنج سال تعلیق شده است.  روشن نبود كه آیا دستگیری او در رابطه با این حكم بوده است یا خیر.
بلوچ‌ها
یك گروه مسلح بلوچ به نام جندالله به حمله علیه مأموران ایرانی، از جمله بمب‌گذاری یك اتوبوس حامل نیروهای سپاه پاسداران در فوریه، دست زده است.  این گروه هم‌چنین افرادی را گروگان گرفت كه دست كم یكی از آنان كشته شده است.
*   نصرالله شنبه‌زهی پس از انفجار اتوبوس یادشده دستگیر شد.  پنج روز بعد، او پس از یك محاكمه سریع در ملأ عام اعدام گردید.
*   یعقوب مهرنهاد، رییس انجمن جوانان صدای عدالت، كه یك ان‌جی‌اوی ثبت شده است، پس از شركت در جلسه‌ای در اداره فرهنگ و ارشاد اسلامی استان كه در آن بنا به گزارش فرماندار زاهدان نیز حضور داشته است، در ماه آوریل در زاهدان ابتدائا به وسیله وزارت اطلاعات دستگیر شد.  او در پایان سال، بدون دسترسی به وكیل در زندان زاهدان به سر می‌برد.  او ممكن است تحت شكنجه قرار گرفته باشد.
*   در ماه مه، پلیس به یك دختر 11 ساله بلوچ به نام رؤیا سارانی، در حالی كه پدرش او را با اتومبیل از مدرسه به خانه می‌برد، تیراندازی كرد و او را كشت.  بنا به گزارش، مقامات به خانواده او فشار وارد آوردند كه تشییع جنازه محدودی بگیرند.  اعتقاد بر این است كه هیچ تحقیق رسمی در باره كشتن او انجام نگرفته است.
کردها
اعضای حزب حیات آزاد در كردستان (پژاك) به نیروهای ایرانی حمله كردند و اینان بخشی از شمال عراق را كه گفته می‌شود مخفی‌گاه پژاك بشمار می‌رود بمباران كردند.  تعداد زیادی كرد دستگیر شدند، برخی از آنان به عضویت در، یا تماس با، گروه‌های غیر قانونی متهم شدند.  روزنامه‌نگاران و مدافعان حقوق بشر كرد به خصوص در خطر آزار و بازداشت به سر می‌بردند. 
*   محمد صدیق كبودوند، رییس سازمان دفاع از حقوق بشر كردستان و سردبیر هفته‌نامه توقیف شده پیام مردم، در ماه ژوئن ظاهرا به خاطر «اقدام علیه امنیت كشور» و «همكاری با گروه‌های مخالف نظام» بازداشت شد، گرچه به او تفهیم اتهام نشده است.  او از شرایط بد زندان و بدرفتاری، از جمله ممنوعیت دسترسی به مستراح، كه ظاهرا به منظور فشار آوردن به سایر رهبران این سازمان برای تسلیم خود به مقامات برای بازجویی اعمال می‌شود، شكایت كرده است. 

اقليت های مذهبی
بهاییان در سراسر كشور به خاطر مذهبشان هم‌چنان با سركوب روبرو بودند.  دست كم 13 نفر بهایی در حد اقل 10 شهر دستگیر شدند و در معرض آزار و رفتارهای تبعیض‌آمیز، مانند محرومیت از دسترسی به آموزش عالی، وام بانكی و پرداخت حقوق بازنشستگی، قرار گرفتند.  نه گورستان بهایی‌ها در معرض بی‌حرمتی قرار گرفت.
در ماه‌های اوت و نوامبر، تعدادی درگیری‌ با صوفی‌ها ده‌ها نفر زخمی بر جای گذاشت، و در نوامبر بیش از 100 نفر دستگیر شدند.  در ماه سپتامبر، یك زن و شوهر - یك مسیحی تغییر مذهب داده كه با یك زن مسیحی در مراسمی اسلامی ازدواج كرده بود - بنا به گزارش در رابطه با مذهبشان در گوهردشت شلاق خوردند.

شکنجه و سایر بدرفتار‌ی‌ها
شکنجه و سایر بدرفتار‌ی‌ها، با بهره‌گیری از دوران طولانی بازداشت پیش از اتهام و محرومیت از دسترسی به وكیل و خانواده، در بسیاری از زندان‌ها و بازداشت‌گاه‌ها عمومیت داشت.  دست كم دو نفر، احتمالا بر اثر شكنجه، در بازداشت در گذشتند.  شكنجه‌گران به ندرت، اگر نگوییم هرگز، به خاطر جنایتشان تحت تعقیب قرار گرفتند.
*   در ماه مه، چهار دانشجو و سردبیران نشریات دانشجویی كه در پلی‌تكنیك امیركبیر دستگیر شده بودند، به گزارش خانواده‌هایشان، تحت شكنجه قرار گرفتند.  بدرفتاری‌ها از جمله شامل جلسات بازجویی 24 ساعته، محرومیت از خواب، ضربات با كابل و مشت، و تهدید زندانیان و خانوادهایشان بوده است.  بازداشتی‌ها در رابطه با مقالاتی كه از سوی مقامات دانشگاهی «اهانت به مقدسات اسلامی» تلقی شد دستگیر شده بودند.  در ماه ژوئیه، خانواده‌های بازداشتی‌ها نامه سرگشاده‌ای خطاب به آیت‌الله شاهرودی رییس قوه قضائیه نوشتند و در آن شكنجه‌های گفته شده را شرح دادند.
*   زهرا بنی‌یعقوب، یك فارغ التحصیل پزشكی در ماه اكتبر در بازداشت در همدان درگذشت.  او به خاطر راه رفتن در پارك به همراه نامزدش دستگیر شده بود و روز بعد در بازداشت درگذشت.  مقامات گفتند كه او خود را حلق‌آویز كرده است.  خانواده‌اش گفتند كه او نیم ساعت پیش از آن كه مرگش كشف شود تلفنی با آنان صحبت كرده و روحیه خوبی داشته است.  یك گزارش در ماه نوامبر حاكی از آن بود كه رییس بازداشتگاه دستگیر شده است ولی با قید وثیقه آزاد شده و بر سر كار خود باقی مانده است.
*   در ماه نوامبر، دستور یك محاكمه مجدد در مورد پرونده مرگ در حین بازداشت زهرا كاظمی، یك روزنامه‌نگار عكاس ایرانی-كانادایی در سال 2003، صادر شد.  او زیر شكنجه درگذشته بود، ولی تنها كسی كه تحت تعقیب قرار گرفت در سال 2004 تبرئه شد و این حكم در 2005 تأیید گردید.  او به خاطر عكس‌برداری از خارج زندان اوین دستگیر شده بود.

مجازات اعدام
در سال 2007، تعداد اعدام‌ها به شدت بالا رفت.  عفو بین‌الملل گزارش‌های مربوط به اعدام 335 نفر را دریافت كرد، گرچه ارقام واقعی اعدام‌ها به طور تقریبا قاطعانه‌ای بالاتر است.  برخی از اعدام‌ها در ملأ عام، آن هم غالبا به صورت اعدام‌های چندنفره اجرا شد.  مجازات مرگ برای جرايم گسترده‌ای شامل قاچاق مواد مخدر، سرقت مسلحانه، قتل، جاسوسی، خشونت سیاسی و تخلفات جنسی اعمال شده است.  در ماه مه، یك دادگاه «مخصوص» در شرق ایران ایجاد شد تا زمان بین جرم و مجازات را كاهش دهد، و این امر به افزایش چشمگیر تعداد اعدام بلوچ‌ها منجر گردید.
بزهكاران خردسال
دست كم هفت نفر كه به هنگام جرم زیر 18 سال بوده‌اند اعدام شدند، و 75 بزهكار خردسال دیگر در انتظار اعدام به سر می‌برند.  به دنبال اعتراضات داخلی و بین‌المللی، حكم اعدام دست كم دو بزهكار خردسال - سینا پایمرد و نازنین فتحی - تخفیف یافت.
*   مكوان مولودزاده، یك بزهكار خردسال كرد ایرانی، پس از یك محاكمه به شدت مخدوش، به دلیل تجاوزی جنسی كه بنا به ادعا او در 13 سالگی یعنی هشت سال پیش‌تر مرتكب شده بود، در ماه دسامبر اعدام شد.  در صدور حكم اعدام، قاضی به «علم» خود، مبنی بر این كه جرم اتفاق افتاده و مكوان مولودزاده در زمان وقوع جرم به بلوغ رسیده بوده و بنا بر این می‌تواند به عنوان یك بزرگسال محاكمه و محكوم شود، اتكا كرده است.
اعدام به وسیله سنگسار
جعفر كیانی، علارغم دستور رییس قوه قضاییه مبنی‌ بر توقف موقت حكم او، در ماه ژوئیه در تاكستان به وسیله سنگسار اعدام شد.  بعدا مقامات گفتند كه قاضی مربوطه «اشتباه» كرده بوده است.  دست كم نه زن، از جمله هم‌پرونده جعفر كیانی، و دو مرد در خطر سنگسار باقی ماندند.  در ماه نوامبر، مقامات قضایی گفتند كه یك متن جدید قانون مجازات برای تصویب به مجلس فرستاده شده است و اگر به تصویب برسد امكان تخفیف احكام سنگسار فراهم خواهد شد.

مجازات‌های بی‌رحمانه، غیر انسانی و خفت‌آور
احكام شلاق و قطع عضو هم‌چنان صادر می‌شد و به مرحله اجرا در می‌آمد.
*    در ماه نوامبر، صغرا مولائی پس از این كه حكم سنگسار او در یك محاكمه مجدد لغو شد، به خاطر «روابط نامشروع» 80 ضربه شلاق خورد.  او به خاطر شركت در قتل شوهرش در زندان به سر می‌برد. 
*    انگشتان یا دست‌های دست كم هشت نفر پس از این كه در دزدی مجرم شناخته شدند قطع شده است.
گزارش های عفو بین الملل
ايران: تضییعات علیه اقلیت بلوچ ( ايندکس عفو بين الملل: ام دی ای 13/104/2007)
ايران: آخرین اعدام كننده كودكان (ايندکس عفو بين الملل: ام دی اي 13/059/2007)

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Amnesty International IRAN annual report

IRAN
ISLAMIC REPUBLIC OF IRAN

Head of state:              Leader of the Islamic Republic of Iran: Ayatollah Sayed ‘Ali

                                    Khamenei
Head of government:     President: Dr Mahmoud Ahmadinejad
Death penalty:              retentionist
Population:                  71.2 million
Life expectancy:            70.2 years
Under-5 mortality (m/f): 32/31 per 1,000
Adult literacy:              82.4 per cent
The authorities continued to suppress dissent. Journalists, writers, scholars, and women’s rights and community activists were subject to arbitrary arrest, travel bans, closure of their NGOs and harassment. Armed opposition, mainly by Kurdish and Baluchi groups, continued, as did state repression of Iran ’s minority communities. Discrimination against women remained entrenched in law and practice. Torture and other ill-treatment were widespread in prisons and detention centres. A security clampdown announced in April was marked by a sharp rise in executions; at least 335 people were executed, among them seven child offenders. Sentences of stoning to death, amputation and flogging continued to be passed and carried out.

Background
Iran ’s uranium enrichment programme continued to be a focus of international tension. Israeli and US authorities refused to rule out the possibility of military action against Iran . In March, the UN Security Council imposed further sanctions. In September, the US government designated Iran ’s Revolutionary Guards a “terrorist organization” for allegedly supporting insurgents in Iraq and Afghanistan . In December, US intelligence agencies published a report stating that Iran had ended any nuclear weapons programme in 2003. The same month the UN General Assembly condemned the human rights situation in Iran .

Ayatollah Meshkini, Head of the Assembly of Experts that oversees the appointment of the Supreme Leader, died in July. He was replaced by former President Hashemi Rafsanjani.

Increasing numbers of Iranians faced poverty as the economic situation deteriorated. In June rioting followed the introduction of petrol rationing. A three-month strike by workers at the Haft Tapeh Sugar Plant in Khuzestan Province over unpaid wages and benefits was forcibly broken up by security forces in October. Haft Tapeh and other workers and teachers staged large demonstrations, and arrests were made.

Freedom of expression
Vaguely worded laws and harsh practices resulted in widespread repression of peaceful dissent. Demonstrations frequently led to mass arrests and unfair trials. The authorities maintained tight restrictions on internet access. Journalists, academics and webloggers, including some dual nationals, were detained and sentenced to prison or flogging and several publications were closed down. In April, the Minister of Intelligence, Gholam Hossein Eje’i, publicly accused students and the women’s movement of being part of an attempt to bring about the “soft overthrow” of the Iranian government.

  • Ali Farahbakhsh, a journalist, was granted an early conditional release in October after 11 months in detention. He was convicted of “espionage” and “receiving money from foreigners” in connection with his attendance at a media conference in Thailand .

    Human rights defenders
    Independent human rights groups and other NGOs continued to face long delays, often lasting years, in obtaining official registration, leaving them at risk of closure for carrying out illegal activities. Students campaigning for greater respect for human rights faced reprisals, including arbitrary arrest and torture. Individual human rights defenders were persecuted for their work; some were prisoners of conscience.

    • Emaddedin Baghi, Head of the Association for the Defence of Prisoners and a leading campaigner against the death penalty, was detained in October following a summons relating to accusations of “endangering national security”. While the family was posting bail, they were told that he now had to serve a suspended sentence imposed in 2003, including for “printing lies”. Another three-year prison term imposed on him in July 2007 for “propaganda in favour of opponents”, arising from his work on behalf of Iranian Ahwazi Arabs sentenced to death after unfair trials, was pending appeal. His wife, Fatemeh Kamali Ahmad Sarahi, and daughter, Maryam Baghi, were given three-year suspended prison sentences in October for “meeting and colluding with the aim of disrupting national security” after attending a human rights workshop in Dubai in 2004. In December he suffered a seizure while in custody.
    • Mansour Ossanlu, head of the Union of Workers of the Tehran and Suburbs Bus Company, was detained in July after visiting Europe to gather support for the independent trade union movement in Iran . Following international protests he received medical treatment for an eye injury reportedly sustained during a dispute with prison officials during an earlier detention. In October an appeals court upheld a five-year prison sentence imposed in February.

      Discrimination against women
      Women continued to face widespread discrimination in law and practice. Thousands were arrested for non-compliance with the obligatory dress code.

      Activists working with the Campaign for Equality, which aims to collect a million signatures in Iran calling for an end to legalized discrimination against women, faced harassment and arrest. In August, Nasim Sarabandi and Fatemeh Dehdashti were sentenced to six months’ imprisonment, suspended for two years, for “acting against national security through the spread of propaganda against the system”. They were the first people to be tried and sentenced for collecting signatures. At the end of the year, four campaign activists remained in detention without charge or trial – Ronak Safarzadeh and Hana Abdi, Kurdish women who were detained in Sanandaj in October and November respectively; and Maryam Hosseinkhah and Jelveh Javaheri, who were detained in Tehran in connection with their work editing the campaign’s website. The authorities persistently filtered the website, making access difficult.

      Women’s rights defender Delaram Ali, who had been arrested in June 2006 following a peaceful demonstration demanding greater respect for women’s rights, had her 30-month prison sentence temporarily postponed following local and international campaigning. In March, 33 women activists were arrested outside Tehran ’s

      Revolutionary Court

      during a protest against the trial of five women charged in connection with the June 2006 demonstration. All were released, but some faced trial.

      Repression of minorities
      Repression continued of Iran ’s ethnic minorities, who maintained their campaigning for greater recognition of their cultural and political rights.

      Arabs
      At least eight Iranian Ahwazi Arabs were executed after being convicted in connection with bomb explosions in Khuzestan in 2005. At least 17 other Iranian Arabs were believed to be facing execution after unfair trials related to the bombings. Scores, possibly hundreds, of Ahwazi Arabs were reportedly arrested in April, in advance of the anniversary of riots in 2005 protesting against a letter allegedly written by a presidential adviser, who denied its authenticity, which set out policies for the reduction of the Arab population of Khuzestan.

      • In April, journalist Mohammad Hassan Fallahiya was sentenced to three years in prison with hard labour for writing articles critical of the government and for allegedly contacting opposition groups based outside Iran . He was detained in November 2006 and denied access to a lawyer throughout the judicial process. His family said the Evin Prison authorities refused to allow them to take him medicines required to treat heart and blood disorders, endangering his life.

        Azerbaijanis
        Hundreds of Iranian Azerbaijani activists were arrested in connection with a peaceful demonstration on International Mother Language Day, 21 February. The demonstrators called for their own language to be used in schools and other education institutions in the areas of north-west Iran where most Iranian Azerbaijanis reside.

        • Prisoner of conscience Saleh Kamrani, a lawyer and human rights defender, was detained in Evin Prison between August and December. In September 2006 he had been sentenced to a year in prison – suspended for five years – for “spreading propaganda against the system”. It was unclear whether his arrest was connected to this sentence.

          Baluchis
          Jondallah, a Baluchi armed group, carried out attacks on Iranian officials, including bombing a bus carrying Revolutionary Guards in February. It also took hostages, at least one of whom was killed.

          • Nasrollah Shanbeh-zehi was arrested following the bus bombing. Five days later he was publicly executed following a summary trial.
          • Ya’qub Mehrnehad, head of the Voice of Justice Young People’s Society, a recognized NGO, was detained in April in Zahedan, initially by the Ministry of Intelligence, following a meeting in the Provincial Office of the Ministry of Culture and Islamic Guidance that the Governor of Zahedan reportedly attended. He remained in Zahedan Prison at the end of the year, without access to a lawyer. He may have been tortured.
          • In May police shot dead Roya Sarani, an 11-year-old Baluchi girl, while she was being driven home from school by her father in Zahedan. The authorities reportedly put pressure on her family to hold a small funeral. No official investigation was believed to have been held into her killing.

            Kurds
            Members of the Party for a Free Life in Kurdistan (Partiya Jiyana Azadîya Kurdistanê, PJAK) attacked Iranian forces, who shelled parts of northern Iraq where they believed PJAK forces were hiding. Numerous Kurds were arrested, many accused of membership of, or contact with, proscribed groups. Kurdish journalists and human rights defenders were particularly at risk of harassment and detention.

            • Mohammad Sadiq Kabudvand, head of the Human Rights Organization of Kurdistan (HROK) and editor of the banned weekly newspaper Payam-e Mardom, was detained in July apparently for “acting against national security”, “propaganda against the system” and “co-operating with groups opposed to the system”, although he was not formally charged. He complained of poor prison conditions and ill-treatment, including denial of access to the toilet, which was apparently intended to force other leading HROK members to turn themselves in to security officials for questioning.

              Religious minorities
              Baha’is throughout the country continued to face persecution on account of their religion. At least 13 Baha’is were arrested in at least 10 cities and were subject to harassment and discriminatory practices, such as denial of access to higher education, bank loans and pension payments. Nine Baha’i cemeteries were desecrated.

              In August and November, clashes involving Sufis resulted in scores of injuries and, in November, more than 100 arrests. In September, a couple – a Christian convert who married a Christian woman in an Islamic ceremony – were reportedly flogged in Gohar Dasht in connection with their faith.

              Torture and other ill-treatment
              Torture and other ill-treatment were common in many prisons and detention centres, facilitated by prolonged pre-charge detention and denial of access to lawyers and family. At least two people died in custody, possibly as a result of torture. Torturers were rarely if ever held to account for their crimes.

              • In May, four students and editors-in-chief of student publications arrested in May at Amir Kabir Polytechnic were tortured, according to their families. The abuse allegedly included 24-hour interrogation sessions, sleep deprivation, beatings with cables and fists, and threats to prisoners and their families. The detainees were arrested in connection with articles deemed by university officials to “insult Islamic sanctities”. In July, the families of the detained students sent an open letter to Ayatollah Shahroudi, Head of the Judiciary, describing the alleged torture.
              • Zahra Bani Yaghoub, a medical graduate, died in custody in Hamadan in October. She was arrested for walking in a park with her fiancé and died in detention the next day. The authorities said she had hanged herself. Her family said that she was in good spirits when they spoke to her on the phone half an hour before she was found dead. A report in November indicated that the head of the detention centre had been detained, but was then released on bail and remained in office.
              • In November, a retrial was ordered in the case of the 2003 death in custody of Zahra Kazemi, a Canadian-Iranian photojournalist. She was tortured to death, but the only person prosecuted was acquitted in 2004, a decision upheld in 2005. She had been arrested for taking photographs outside Evin Prison.

                Death penalty
                The number of executions rose sharply in 2007. Amnesty International received reports that at least 335 people were executed, although the true figure was almost certainly higher. Some people were executed in public, often in multiple hangings. Death sentences were imposed for a wide range of crimes, including drug smuggling, armed robbery, murder, espionage, political violence and sexual offences. A “special” court in eastern Iran established in May 2006 to reduce the time between the crime and the punishment led to a marked rise in the number of Baluchis executed.

                Child offenders

                At least seven people aged under 18 at the time of the crime were executed and at least 75 other child offenders remained on death row. Following domestic and international protests, the death sentences of at least two child offenders – Sina Paymard and Nazanin Fatehi – were commuted.

                 

                • Makwan Moloudzadeh, an Iranian Kurdish child offender, was executed in December following a grossly flawed trial for three rapes he allegedly committed at the age of 13, eight years earlier. In sentencing him to death, the judge relied on his “knowledge” that the offence had occurred and that Makwan Moloudzadeh had reached puberty at the time of the crime and so could be tried and sentenced as an adult.

                  Execution by stoning

                  Ja’far Kiani was stoned to death in Takestan in July, despite an order from the Head of the Judiciary granting a temporary stay of execution. The judge in the case was later said by officials to have been “mistaken”. At least nine women, including Ja’far Kiani’s co-defendant, and two men remained at risk of stoning. In November, judicial officials said that a new version of the Penal Code had been sent to the Majles for approval and that, if approved, it would provide for the possibility of commuting stoning sentences.

                  Cruel, inhuman and degrading punishments
                  Sentences of flogging and amputation continued to be passed and implemented.

                  • In November, Soghra Mola’i was flogged 80 times for “illicit relations” after her sentence of death by stoning was overturned following a retrial. She remained in prison to serve a sentence for involvement in the murder of her husband.
                  • At least eight people had their fingers or hand amputated after conviction of theft.

                    Amnesty International reports

                    • Iran : Human rights abuses against the Baluchi minority (MDE 13/104/2007)

                    Iran : The last executioner of children (MDE 13/059/2007)

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                    Wednesday, May 21, 2008

                    Amnesty International urgent call to save Saeed Jazee

                    PUBLIC         - AI Index: MDE 13/070/2008
                    21 May 2008
                    Further Information on UA 08/08 (MDE 13/006/2008, 09 January 2008) – Death penalty
                    IRAN - Saeed Jazee (m), aged 21, juvenile offender

                    Saeed Jazee’s death sentence has been approved by the Head of the Judiciary. The family of the victim still have the power to pardon him, but if they choose not to then he will be in imminent danger of execution.  

                    Saeed Jazee, a sculptor, is held in a young offenders centre in Karaj, Tehran Province. He was convicted of the murder of a 22-year-old man, which took place in 2003 when he was 17 years old, and sentenced to qesas (retribution). The Supreme Court rejected his appeal, and his case was sent for final approval to the Head of the Judiciary, Ayatollah Mahmoud Hashemi Shahroudi.

                    The killing apparently took place after Saeed Jazee had gone to a friend’s sandwich shop, helped himself to a sandwich and started eating it. The 22-year-old man, who had just started working at the shop and did not know Saeed, started arguing with him about the sandwich and attacked him with a kitchen knife. During the scuffle, the knife fell to the floor and Saeed picked it up at the same time as the man charged at him and was wounded in the process. Saeed Jazee and the other employees in the shop tried to help him. During the trial, the shop’s other employees stated that the killing had been accidental. Saeed Jazee has repeatedly stated that the killing was not intentional.

                    Under Article 206 (b) of Iran’s Criminal Code, murder is classed as premeditated “in cases where the murderer intentionally makes an action which is inherently lethal, even if [the murderer] does not intend to kill the person.”

                    BACKGROUND INFORMATION

                    As a state party to both the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and the Convention on the Rights of the Child, Iran has undertaken not to execute juvenile offenders, those convicted of crimes committed when they were under 18. However, since 1990 Iran has executed at least 28 juvenile offenders, six of them in 2007. At least 84 juvenile offenders are now on death row in Iran. This number may be even higher as at least a further 15 Afghan juvenile offenders have reportedly been sentenced to death. For more information about executions of juvenile offenders in Iran, please see: Iran: The last executioner of children (MDE 13/059/2007, June 2007), http://web.amnesty.org/library/index/engmde130592007.

                    Amnesty International opposes the death penalty in all cases, and supports the global trend away from the use of the death penalty, powerfully expressed in the UN General Assembly’s resolution calling for a worldwide moratorium on executions on 18 December 2007.

                     
                    RECOMMENDED ACTION: Please send appeals to arrive as quickly as possible, in Persian, Arabic, English or your own language:
                    - calling on the authorities to commute the death sentence passed on Saeed Jazee, who is at imminent risk of execution for a crime committed when he was under 18;
                    - reminding them that Iran is a state party to both the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) and the Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC), which prohibits the use of the death penalty against those under the age of 18 at the time of offence, and that the execution of Saeed Jazee would therefore be a violation of international law.

                    APPEALS TO:

                    Leader of the Islamic Republic
                    His Excellency Ayatollah Sayed ‘Ali Khamenei
                    The Office of the Supreme Leader
                    Islamic Republic Street - Shahid Keshvar Doust Street
                    Tehran, Islamic Republic of Iran
                    Email:                 info@leader.ir
                    Salutation:         Your Excellency

                    Head of the Judiciary
                    Ayatollah Mahmoud Hashemi Shahroudi
                    Howzeh Riyasat-e Qoveh Qazaiyeh / Office of the Head of the Judiciary
                    Pasteur St., Vali Asr Ave., south of Serah-e Jomhouri, Tehran 1316814737, Islamic Republic of Iran
                    Email:                 info@dadgostary-tehran.ir (In the subject line write: FAO Ayatollah Shahroudi)
                    Salutation:         Your Excellency

                    COPIES TO:
                    President
                    His Excellency Mahmoud Ahmadinejad
                    The Presidency, Palestine Avenue, Azerbaijan Intersection, Tehran, Islamic Republic of Iran
                    Email:                 dr-ahmadinejad@president.ir OR via website: www.president.ir/email

                    and to diplomatic representatives of Iran accredited to your country.

                    PLEASE SEND APPEALS IMMEDIATELY. Check with the International Secretariat, or your section office, if sending appeals after 2 July 2008.

                    Working to protect human rights worldwide
                    
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