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[Deathpenalty] death penalty news----worldwide

Rick Halperin
Tue, 9 Dec 2008 22:32:06 -0600




Dec. 9



IRAN:

AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL----PUBLIC STATEMENT


09 December 2008

IRAN: Halted execution highlights inherent cruelty of death penalty

News that a prisoner was cut down from the gallows a few minutes after his
execution began and then taken to hospital for resuscitation highlights
the inherent cruelty and arbitrary nature of the death penalty, Amnesty
International said today.

An article carried by the state-owned Islamic Republic News Agency (IRNA)
(http://www2.irna.ir/fa/news/view/line-9/8709173635162756.htm) on 2
December 2008 stated that an unnamed man convicted of murder had been
pardoned by the family of the murder victim a few minutes after his
execution had begun in a prison in Kazeroun, in Iran's southern Fars
province. He was taken to hospital, where his life was saved.

Amnesty International welcomes the family's decision to prevent the
execution proceeding and the prompt action then taken to save the unnamed
man's life, yet this case clearly illustrates the inherent cruelty of the
death penalty. Any person subjected to similar treatment -- for example,
in a "mock-execution" -- would be seen to have been subjected to torture,
which is expressly and totally prohibited under international human rights
law. However, this unnamed man facing execution had no such protection.

The case also highlights the arbitrary nature of the application of the
death penalty in Iran, where two people convicted of the same offence of
intentional murder, may face completely different outcomes - and live or
die - not because of the circumstances of each case, but simply because of
the wishes of the families of the murder victims. For example, Reza
Alinejad, one juvenile offender, was freed from prison on 3 December 2008
after his family managed to raise the diyeh (compensation) required by the
family of a youth he is alleged to have killed at age 17, where other
juvenile offenders, whose execution is expressly forbidden under
international law, have been sent to the gallows. At least seven such
juvenile offenders are known to have been executed by the Iranian
authorities since the beginning of 2008, of whom five had been convicted
of murders committed when they were aged under 18.

Under the Iranian Constitution, all Iranian citizens are equal before the
law. However, the current judicial system encourages arbitrary treatment
which, literally, can mean the difference between life and death. The
answer lies not just in reform of the arbitrary nature of the system,
welcome though this would be, but in the total abolition of the death
penalty.

Amnesty International calls on the Iranian authorities to order an
immediate moratorium on all executions, in line with the United Nations
General Assembly resolution of December 2007. Resolution 62/149 calls upon
states that still maintain the death penalty to "[e]stablish a moratorium
on executions with a view to abolishing the death penalty." The
authorities should also take immediate steps to comply with their
international obligations not to execute juvenile offenders.

Background Information

Amnesty International is aware of other cases where executions have been
stopped at the last minute before they were to be carried out, although
none where an execution was halted after it began. For example, juvenile
offender Mohammad Feda'i, convicted in 2005 of a murder in 2004 when he
was only 17, wrote in a letter from prison in June 2008 of his experiences
of torture to extract a false confession, and when he was nearly executed
in April 2008.

"They asked me to write my will the night I was going to be hanged. I
didn't know what a "will" was. When they put the noose around my neck, I
closed my eyes and asked my God for help. Just few seconds before hanging,
it was halted, because they found out that my lawyers were fake. When I
was coming down from the stairs, once again I saw hope and felt I am going
back to the school again!"

Mohammad Feda'i remains on death row in prison.

In Iran a convicted murderer has no right to seek pardon or commutation
from the state, though this right is protected by Article 6(4) ICCPR. The
family of a murder victim has the right either to insist on execution or
to pardon the killer, or to forego their right to execution in exchange
for financial compensation (diyeh). The Iranian authorities contend that
qesas -- the sentence for convicted murderers -- is not execution, despite
the fact that people sentenced to qesas are put to death by the state.
This contention is not accepted in international law. The vast majority of
juvenile offenders on death row in Iran have been sentenced to qesas for
murder.

(source: Amnesty International)