May 29


CHINA----execution

China executes teacher for sexually abusing 26 girls



China's top court said it has executed a primary school teacher found guilty of raping or sexually abusing 26 girls.

Li Jishun had committed the crimes between 2011 and 2012 while teaching at a village school in Gansu province.

He preyed on pupils aged 4 to 11 who were "young and timid", according to a statement by the Supreme People's Court reported by local media.

It said there have been more than 7,000 child sex abuse cases in recent years and that the trend is on the rise.

'Grave threat'

Li had raped 21 of his victims and sexually abused the other 5 in classrooms, dormitories, and the forest surrounding the village near Wushan town.

The statement said that some of his victims had been raped or abused more than once. It made no mention of how he was caught.

But it said that the Gansu court had found him "a grave threat to society" and noted that he had committed the crimes within just 1 year.

"The Supreme People's Court thus believes that it was appropriate for Li Jishun to be executed," it said.

Local media ran the story with caricatures of the man depicting him as a wolf gobbling up children.

His sentencing was met with widespread approval on China's microblogging platform Weibo, with many expressing shock at the youth of his victims.

"4 years old? I can't believe it," said one. "A death sentence is too good for this man," wrote another commenter.

In a rare disclosure of abuse statistics, the Supreme People's Court told local media that the courts heard 7,145 cases of child sexual abuse between 2012 and 2014.

The figures showed that the number of cases went up by about 40% during those years.

(source: BBC news)








IRAN----executions

3 Men Executed in Front of Children - 4 Executed in Prison in Iran



3 men were hanged in public in Mashhad (northeastern Iran) Wednesday, reported the Iranian state media. According to the Iranian state broadcasting, the men were charged with armed robbery, kidnapping, keeping arms. 2 of the men were 27 year and the 3rd was 38 years old. None of them were identified by name. Pictures published in the Iranian media show several minors and children watching the executions.

The official Iranian news agency IRNA reported about the execution of 1 man charged with murder. The execution took place on Thursday May 28 in the prison of Gachsaran (Western Iran).

2 men were hanged in the prison of Kerman (Southeastern Iran), according to unofficial reports. The men who have not been identified by name were charged with murder.

(source: Iran Human Rights)

**********************

Iran Executed 59 people in Mere 6 Days, Monitoring Group Alleges



An Iranian monitoring group has alleged that the government, in a matter of mere 6 days, has secretly executed 59 'activists' in the largely Shia-Muslim populated country.

According to France-based National Council of Resistance of Iran (NCRI), a political umbrella coalition of 5 Iranian opposition political organisations, Iran carried out "a wave of secret execution inside the country's prisons".

The NCRI report noted that between 19 May and 21 May, the Iranian regime executed 37 people in prisons or on the streets of various cities. Similarly, at least 22 peope were executed between 23 May and 25 May.

Criticising the increase in number of executions, the group which is headed by Maryam Rajavi, a popular Iranian politician living in exile in France, noted in the report: "The executions are aimed at raising the atmosphere of terror in the society in order to prevent any public expression of dissent in the country."

On the recent spate of executions in Iran, Soona Samsami, NCRI's US Representative, told IBTimes India: "The political climate of repression and censorship in Iran, coupled with lack of due process in the judiciary, create severe difficulties in finding the truth behind Iran's executions."

"However, one thing is certain: the regime continues to use the death penalty, not as a deterrent to drug abuse or to stem ordinary crimes, but as a means of inflicting terror in a young and increasing restless and enraged population," Samsami said.

Samsami also hit out at Iranian President Hassan Rouhani's failure to curb human rights abuses in the country.

"Hassan Rouhani's approval of these barbaric hangings notwithstanding, there is no room for reform in a constitution with a non-representative 'Supreme Leader,' and a judiciary that executed 30,000 political prisoners in a matter of months in 1988 alone. Ironically, Mostafa Pourmohammadi, one of the three people who sat on the "death commission" that sent these political prisoners, mostly MEK members, to the gallows, is Rouhani's Justice Minister," she added

The Huffington Post earlier this month had reported that an estimated 347 executions were carried out in Iran since the beginning of the year. In 2014, the total number of executions was 735, which according to Oslo-based organisation Iran Human Rights was a 10 % increase from the previous year.

"There is an internal conflict going on now between the hard-line judiciary and Rouhani's moderate administration," Iranian human rights campaigner Taghi Rahmani told BBC. "And it's the activists who are paying the price."

The highly criticised execution reports have come at a time when Iran is inching towards reaching an agreement on the final nuclear deal. The United States, Iran, Britain, France, Germany, Russia and China on 2 April reached a tentative agreement for a nuclear deal.

There were, however, several issues that were yet to be resolved and the countries had opted for a 30 June deadline to reach a comprehensive agreement. Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif, however, noted on Thursday that arriving at a final deal by 30 June will be difficult, if the other side stuck to what he called excessive demand, Reuters reported.

(source: IB Times)








ALGERIA:

Algerian court condemns 12 to death for 2008 bombing



A court in Algeria has handed down death sentences to 12 people and condemned 2 others to life imprisonment over their involvement in a bomb explosion that claimed the lives of a Frenchman and his driver back in 2008.

On Wednesday, the Algiers Criminal Court found the accused "forming an armed terrorist group and premeditated voluntary homicide."

The defendants given the death penalty are all members of the Katibat el-Arkam network, a splinter group of al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM). They are at large and Algerian judicial officials tried them in absentia.

The 2 present in the court, identified as Khaled Asalah and Brahim Brahim, admitted being AQIM members and taking part in several terrorist attacks.

Engineer Pierre Nowacki of the French enterprise BTP Razel and his Algerian driver were killed on June 9, 2008, when a bomb explosion ripped through their vehicle as it was travelling on a road in the town of Beni Amrane, located some 80 kilometers (49 miles) east of the capital, Algiers.

7 people sustained injuries minutes later when a second blast struck the town.

The French national had been supervising repair work on a railway tunnel in the area.

(source: Albawaba news)








SAUDI ARABIA----execution

Saudi beheads Pakistani national for drug trafficking



Saudi authorities have beheaded a Pakistani national convicted of drug trafficking, bringing to 90 the number of such executions amid international outcry over the "very disturbing" trend.

The Saudi Interior Ministry said in a statement carried by the official Saudi Press Agency that the man, identified as Ihsan Amin, was decapitated in the capital, Riyadh, on Thursday after being found guilty of heroin smuggling.

Meanwhile, Amnesty International has described Saudi Arabia's use of death penalty as unprecedented, and said the toll is "one of the highest recorded by the organization during the same period for more than 3 decades."

The London-based watchdog said on Thursday that almost half of the executions carried out so far this year were for drug-related offences, and about 1/2 of those put to death have been foreigners.

"These do not fall into the category of 'most serious crimes', and the use of the death penalty for such offences violates international law," it said.

"With the year yet to pass its midpoint, the (Persian) Gulf kingdom has raced towards this shocking toll at an unprecedented rate," said Deputy Director of Amnesty International's Middle East and North Africa Program Said Boumedouha.

"This alarming surge in executions surpasses even the country's own previous dreadful records," he noted.

On Wednesday, the United Nations special rapporteur on extrajudicial, summary or arbitrary executions expressed concern about a surge in the number of executions carried out in Saudi Arabia.

"It is certainly very disturbing that there is such a fast pace of executions at the moment," Christof Heyns said.

In Saudi Arabia, rape, murder, apostasy, armed robbery and drug trafficking all carry the death penalty. Beheadings are carried out in public using a sword.

Muslim scholars and clerics have on occasions criticized Saudi authorities for indicting and then executing suspects without giving them a chance to defend themselves.

(source: Albawaba news)



PAKISTAN----execution

PIA fokker hijackers executed after 17 years



Pakistan on Thursday morning executed seven death-row prisoners, including three hostage takers trying to hijack Karachi bound PIA Fokker plane allegedly to India in 1998, with more than 30 passengers on board, after it took off from Turbat city in Baluchistan province.

The execution of 2 hijackers, Shahsawar Baluch and Sabir Baluch, took place in Hyderabad jail while the third one, Shabbir Baluch, was hanged in Karachi prison. They were given death punishment in 1998 and their appeals were turned down by the higher courts as well. The president had also rejected their mercy petitions. The anti- terrorism court's judge, Abdul Ghafoor Memon, had issued death warrant for them last week.

The hijacker had forced the pilot to take the plane to India but the pilot, Captain Uzair, had landed the plane at Hyderabad airport, a main city in southern Sindh province. He had deceived the hijackers by convincing them that the plane ran short of fuel and that he had landed at the Indian state of Gujarat. Hyberabad's then top administration and police officers, while impersonating as Indian officials, had held talks with the hijackers. Late at night, the Pakistan security agencies had overpowered the hijackers and had arrested them.

The hijackers had demanded that Baluchistan province should not be used for nuclear tests, following India's testing of nuclear weapons. Pakistan, however, had tested its nuclear devices in Chaghi, Baluchistan, 4 days after the hijacking incident.

4 more convicts were also executed in different areas of the country for murders. They were executed in Sahiwal and Sargodha in Punjab, Haripur in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province and Karachi.

A moratorium on the death penalty had been in force in Pakistan since 2008, but executions were restarted in December after Taliban militants had gunned down about 150 people, most of them children, at the Army Public School in Peshawar.

The moratorium was initially lifted only for those convicted of terrorism offences, but in March was extended to cover all capital offences. Since then, over 125 people have been executed all over the country. There are nearly 8000 death-row prisoners in jails across Pakistan.

The United Nations, the European Union, Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch have called on Pakistan to re-impose its moratorium on the death penalty.

(source: Times of India)








EGYPT:

Council of Europe head appeals Morsi death sentence



The head of the Council of Europe has written to Egypt's Grand Mufti asking him not to approve hundreds of death sentences hanging over jailed dissidents - including former president, Mohamed Morsi.

Thorbjorn Jagland wrote to Professor Shawki Abdel-Karim Allam on Thursday in the hope that capital punishment will not be applied to Morsi and over 100 Muslim Brotherhood activists.

Egyptian law requires death penalties to be referred to the Grand Mufti, the highest religious official in the country.

"The Council of Europe is firmly opposed to the death penalty as a cruel and inhumane punishment which denies human dignity and integrity and can never be undone," Jagland wrote in the letter.

Last year, hundreds of Egyptians were sentenced to death but rulings on only a few dozen were actually upheld, the rest converted into jail sentences of 25 years.

Morsi and 12 codefendants were sentenced to 20 years in prison last month for allegedly mobilizing supporters to "intimidate, detain and torture" dozens of anti-Morsi protesters during clashes outside eastern Cairo's Ittihadiya presidential palace in December 2012.

The former president currently faces multiple criminal trials on charges that include espionage and ???insulting the judiciary,??? charges he says are politically motivated.

(source: World Bulletin)

**************

Oxford postgraduate sentenced to death by Egyptian government



Students throughout the university have expressed their outrage at the death sentence granted to Oxford student Sondos Asem in Egypt.

The 28 year old researcher and graduate student Sondos Asem is studying at the Oxford University Blavatnik School of Government and is a member of the Freedom and Justice party. Asem was sentenced to death in absentia on Saturday 16th May in Egypt after being charged with espionage and conspiring with the Palestinian movement Hamas, in relation to her position as the International Media Co-Ordinator for the former Egyptian President Morsi. Mohamed Morsi, alongside his former aides and scholars such as Emad Shahin, have also been sentenced to the death penalty although Asem is the only female charged. In occurrence with Egyptian law, this preliminary sentence will be sent to the Grand Multi for approval.

Students from across the university have since expressed their solidarity with Asem and defended her against the accusations of the government.

On 22nd May, current MPP and DPhil students at The Blavatnik School of Government voiced their concerns on the departmental website. The 78 students from 51 countries affirmed their solidarity for their friend. The students posted: "We are appalled to hear that Sondos is being prosecuted for simply doing her job as a Foreign Media Co-ordinator in the office of a democratically elected president.

"Sondos is as passionate and committed to the principles of public service as any of us. Whether it is lending an ear to friends, debating philosophy, praying together, or playing football with classmates, Sondos is an invaluable part of our community.

Like all of us, she came here to learn how to improve people's lives through good government ...We note that the judgment against her has yet to be reviewed. However, we are deeply saddened that these actions mean Sondos will be unable to return to Egypt or visit her family until she has been cleared of the charges."

They continued: "we condemn this ruling and urge people and governments to speak up for the rule of law and against this injustice".

Sondos' college Women's Football Team also proposed a motion to the Collrgr JCR that the college (where Asem is a member of the MCR and plays for the team) condemn the death sentence. This motion, which passed unopposed, stated that the 'ruling was unjust and politically motivated' and contrary to the "rule of law" fundamental "in a democratic society". The JCR also resolved to "follow Blavatnik's example in fully condemning the ruling", to "urge the college to provide support and assistance to Sondos" and to demonstrate their "solidarity" with a "friend, peer and teammate". One Wadham College student added: "What has happened to Asem is deeply troubling. As a college and as university it is our responsibility to stand behind Asem and fight back against what can only be described as a gross injustice".

Speaking to the OxStu, Asem said: "The support I have received so far from my fellow students is what makes me stronger. I am impressed by the level of political awareness, human rights advocacy, and empathy on the part of my fellow students in Oxford and my college. This has proved to me that people can share the same values despite coming from different countries and cultures.

"This death sentence is not just about me, it is one example of the injustice that thousands of other women and men, are suffering due to repression in Egypt".

Asem was a high profile and vocal presence throughout Egypt and had a range of roles including acting as the Senior Editor of Ikhwan Web, the Muslim Brotherhood english-language online website. In a 2011 interview, she voiced her concerns surrounding the misconceptions relating to the Muslim Brotherhood stating: "It's a big misconception that the Muslim Brotherhood marginalises women" as "50 % of the Brotherhood are women".

Asem also affirmed that as an organisation: "We believe that a solution to women's problems in Egyptian society is to solve the real causes, which are illiteracy, poverty and lack of education."

The final sentence will be pronounced on June 2nd.

Due to security concerns for Asem and college members, we cannot detail which college she is currently attending

(source: The Oxford Student)

NIGERIA:

Outgoing Delta premier pardons death row inmates



Some 9 years after his arrest and controversial conviction, a Delta State prisoner on death row, has been granted freedom ahead of Democracy Day.

Outgoing Governor, Emmanuel Uduaghan, announced he had granted pardon to Moses Akatugba, and three others facing the death penalty in the state.

The governor disclosed this after Valedictory State Executive Council Meeting in preparation for Friday's inauguration of Senator Ifeanyi Okowa as the State Governor.

He said the pardon was granted based on a report from the State Prerogative of Mercy Council and reviewed by the State Attorney General.

"I have granted pardon to Moses Akatugba, I have signed his warrant of release, he was the young man who was sentenced to death when he was 16 years old and his case has been trending on the social media and Amnesty International has also intervened" Uduaghan said.

Akatugba, then a student, was just 16 years old when he was arrested under suspicion of armed robbery in Nigeria.

The arrest grabbed international headlines.

It is reported soldiers shot him in the hand and beat him on the head before taking him to the police station where he was assaulted repeatedly before he was forced to sign pre-written confessions.

Last year, Akatugba was sentenced to death, after 8 years awaiting trial in prison.

It is said the sentence was based only on his forced confession and the testimony of the robbery victim, which was full of contradictions.

The governor also announced the pardon of 3 unnamed inmates facing death penalty in the state to prison terms. "I have also commuted the death sentence of 3 others to various prison terms" he added.

He meanwhile disclosed that the ban on youth activities in Oghara had been lifted. He thus charged the youth to maintain the peace and liaise with the traditional institution to work out modalities on how to carry out their activities.

(source: News24Nigeria)








INDONESIA:

Executions fail to dent Jakarta's drug war----1 month since the executions of 2 Australians and 6 others, it seems they didn't have the deterrent effect Indonesia's president had hoped for.



The agency on the frontline of Indonesia's "drugs emergency" senses the death penalty will eventually prove an effective deterrent, despite even prison officials being busted since the executions of 8 offenders 1 month ago.

Australians Andrew Chan and Myuran Sukumaran were among the men killed by firing squad at midnight on April 29.

Since then, a prison guard on the same penal island where the executions took place, Nusakambangan, was caught with drugs.

A prisoner told investigators he paid the man to smuggle 364 grams of methamphetamine out of the jail.

And last week, a guard in West Java was caught with 16 kilograms of methamphetamine and several hundred ecstasy pills he claims were not his but drugs he had seized from prisoners.

Although there is no evidence the death penalty deters crime, President Joko Widodo believes executing death row drug convicts will be "shock therapy" for would-be offenders.

So far this year, Indonesia has executed 14 people.

Asked if the recent arrests showed the policy was flawed, National Narcotics Board (BNN) spokesman Slamet Pribadi argued it would take time to work.

"For now, maybe not," he told AAP.

"But it will in the future."

Mr Slamet promised the BNN would begin to show headway in Mr Joko's war on drugs within 3 to 6 months.

"Our intelligence data has shown talk among drug mafias saying beware of the BNN," he claimed.

"What does that mean actually? I don't know.

"My interpretation is that in general, this prevention must have worked."

Indonesia's attorney general's office has finished an evaluation on last month's executions and will soon start planning more.

Australia's ambassador to Indonesia, Paul Grigson, remains recalled, with a date for his return still under consideration.

Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch and other groups have submitted a blueprint to Australia's federal government to renew the way it campaigns for global abolition.

Parliamentarians against the death penalty, a group co-chaired by Philip Ruddock and Chris Hayes, will discuss its plans later this month.

(source: sbs.com.au)
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