Dec. 13




IRAN----executions

5 Prisoners Executed In Western Iran



5 prisoners were executed at Kermanshah Central Prison on murder charges.

According to a close source, on the morning of Monday December 11, 5 prisoners were executed at Kermanshah Central Prison (Western Iran). All of the prisoners were sentenced to death on murder charges.

1 of the executed prisoners was identified as Keykavus Ashouri. He was arrested and sentenced to death 15 years ago.

The execution of these prisoners has not been announced by the state-run media so far.

According to Iran Human Rights annual report on the death penalty, 142 of the 530 execution sentences in 2016 were implemented due to murder charges. There is a lack of a classification of murder by degree in Iran which results in issuing death sentence for any kind of murder regardless of intensity and intent.

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Prisoner Scheduled To Be Executed in Public



A prisoner who was sentenced to public execution on the charge of murdering a police officer was transferred to solitary confinement.

According to a close source, a prisoner was transferred to solitary confinement in Isfahan Central Prison. The prisoner is charged with murdering a police officer, named Asghar Qezavi, while trafficking drugs in Naein (Fars Province) in April 2016. He was arrested and sentenced to public execution along with 4 other people.

The execution is apparently going to be carried out publically in Naein on the next morning.

According to Iran Human Rights annual report on the death penalty 33 people have been executed in public in front of large crowds including children in 2016. Public executions have been strongly criticized by Iranian human rights activists and sociologists.

(source for both: Iran Human Rights)

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Iranian court upholds death penalty for researcher)



Human rights groups are reporting that Iran's Supreme Court has upheld the death sentence for a disaster medicine researcher, Ahmadreza Djalali. Amnesty International reported Tuesday that Djalali's lawyers have learned that the Supreme Court upheld the death sentence "in a summary manner without granting them an opportunity to file their defense submissions."

Djalali, an Iranian-born resident of Sweden, was arrested in April 2016 during an academic trip to Iran and convicted in October of spying in what Amnesty describes as a "grossly unfair" trial. In an August letter from Tehran's Evin Prison, Djalali wrote that he was arrested for his refusal to use his academic and other ties in Europe to spy for Iran. Djalali holds a Ph.D. in disaster medicine from the Karolinska Institute, in Sweden, and taught at the Universita` degli Studi del Piemonte Orientale, in Italy, and at Vrije Universiteit Brussel, in Belgium.

(source: insidehighered.com)








EGYPT:

MP introduces draft law stipulating death penalty for rapists of women, children



Aiming to limit incidences of rape and kidnapping against women and children, Member of Parliament Mona Monir has suggested amendments to Egypt's main penal code including the death penalty for perpetrators of such crimes.

Egypt Independent obtained a copy of the draft law on Tuesday.

The 1st suggested modification relates to rape and stipulates perpetrators of the crime should be sentenced to death as opposed to the current sentence of lifetime imprisonment.

The amendment suggests that if the perpetrator of the crime is a relative of the victim or works as a servant for her, the death penalty should be applied.

The draft law also suggests that the perpetrator of sexual assault against any person under 18, whether male or female, should receive the death penalty.

The draft law suggests that anyone found guilty of kidnapping a minor should also be sentenced to death or life in prison. A perpetrator of kidnapping who is a relative or guardian should immediately receive the death penalty.

"I strongly support the death penalty against those who commit kidnapping or rape crimes targeting female or male children or handicapped children[...]

Perpetrators should receive the death penalty without any opportunity of appeal," MP Mona Monir told Egypt Independent on Tuesday.

She added that the draft law has been introduced to the Egyptian parliament's legislative committee which is assigned to review it and decide a date for starting discussion.

Egypt's penal code does not include the death penalty as a first punishment for perpetrators of rape and kidnapping crimes against children, Monir explained, arguing that amendments are necessary.

Monir also argued that there has been a significant rise of incidences of rape and kidnapping of children and that the recent rape of a baby pushed her to call for the death penalty for such crimes against minors.

(source: Egypt Independent)








LEBANON:

Judge calls for death penalty for child who murdered father, 2 others



Beirut's First Investigative Judge Ghassan Oueidat Tuesday called for the death penalty in the case of a 15-year-old boy who killed 3 people, including his father, and attempted to murder 4 others.

Psychiatrist Dr. Mohammad al-Hashash said in a report that there was no evidence that the child, Ali Yunis, had mental health issues that would make him ineligible for trial.

In the early hours of Oct. 17, the decision read, the Internal Security Forces Beirut Operations Chamber contacted the Zoqaq al-Blat station about reports of gunfire in the Baghdadi alleyway near the area's Hosseiniyeh.

Yunis was later arrested for shooting multiple people with a 12-gauge automatic hunting rifle.

Yunis' victims were identified as his father, Mohammad Hussein Yunis, Mohammad Aadan al-Marabi and Mansur Ahmad Abd al-Salam. Those injured were identified as brothers Bassam, Mohammad and Ali Chehab and Salwa Hamad Mansur - the wife of the late Mansur Ahmad.

The coordinator of child protection NGO Himaya's legal unit, Basima Rummani, told The Daily Star that children cannot be sentenced to death in Lebanon.

"Lebanese law does not allow for minors to be sentenced to death at all, no matter what the scale of the crime they committed, the most they can be sentenced to is ... several years in prison," she said. "Will he be sentenced to death? No way. What kind of judge would call for the death penalty, even if it's an indictment, it's laughable," she added.

(source: The Daily Star)




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