http://www.villagevoice.com/news/0638,hentoff,74473,6.html
Stoning Women to Death 
Village Voice ^ | September 17th, 2006 | Nat Hentoff
On June 29, 2006, a court in the Islamic Republic of Iran sentenced Malak
Ghorbany, a 34-year-old mother of two, to a brutal death by stoning after
finding her guilty of adultery. . . . Two men who were found guilty of
murder in the same court were only given jail sentences of six years. . . .
The size of the stones used during the execution are required to be . . .
not so large that they would kill a woman too quickly, nor so small that
they would fail to cause serious injury or pain. The part about the stones
is from Article 104 of the Iranian penal code. 
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, the president of Iran, has become an international
celebrity, brandishing his nuclear program-and his yearning to wipe Israel
off the face of the earth. He is visited by such personages as U.N.
secretary-general Kofi Annan and Mike Wallace of 60 Minutes. In their
conversations with him, neither has asked the swashbuckling leader about
"honor killings" by the government of women charged with having committed
"adultery." 
As human rights lawyer Lily Mazahery, president of the Legal Rights
Institute reports, "in 99 percent of these cases, the accused women have
received no legal representation because, under the Shariah legal system,
their testimony is at best worth only half the value of the testimony of
men." 
And there is no single executioner. These are mass murders by stone-throwing
members of the community, having the kind of festive time common among
American mass lynchers of blacks, when the murderers brought their children
to join in the fun. In Iran too, kids are present to witness the sinners'
redemption. 
The capital crime of adultery, Mazahery has explained to World Net Daily,
"includes [under Shariah law] any type of intimate relationship between a
girl/woman and a man to whom she is not permanently or temporarily married.
Such a relationship does not necessarily mean a sexual relationship. 
"Further, charges of adultery are routinely issued to women/girls who have
been raped-and they are sentenced to death." (Their unpardonable crime is to
have been raped.) 
During the continuous coverage in this country of Iran's nuclear threat and
its crucial support of terrorists in Iraq and elsewhere in the Middle East,
there has been scarcely any mention of this horrifying dimension of the
culture of Iran: sangsar, the stoning to death of women. 
Mazahery, the Persian American lawyer whose mission has long been to save
Iranian women from this and other brutal treatment, tells me that sangsar,
"dating back to the dark ages," was, for a time, suspended by the
pre-revolutionary regime due to pressure from international human rights
organizations, combined with protests from civilized persons around the
world. But when the mullahs took over in the 1979 revolution, they brought
back Shariah law, and when this president came to power, he reinstituted
public stonings, as a "religious principle," against women. 
As of this writing, President Ahmadinejad is on his way to address the
United Nations in New York. There will be heavy press coverage. Will any
reporter ask him about the stoning of women in his country-and the
particular case of Malak Ghorbany? And while former "moderate" Iranian
president Mohammad Khatami has been in the United States-lecturing at
Harvard, among other prestigious venues-I know of no reporter who has asked
him to discourse on the stoning of women under his successor. 
Mazahery, who was recently invited by students and faculty to respond to
Khatami at Harvard, has written and circulated an online petition, "Save
Malak Ghorbany From Death by Public Stoning," addressed to Kofi Annan; the
U.N.'s commissioner of human rights; and Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, leader of
the Islamic Republic of Iran; as well as to the head of its judiciary,
Ayatollah Mahmoud Shahroudi. 
So far, there have been more than 11,000 signatories-from around the world,
including this country, China, and most tellingly, Iran. For Iranians to
sign took much courage. As Ali Afshari and Akbar Atri-founding members of
Iranian Students for Democracy and Human Rights-revealed in the September
2-3 Wall Street Journal: 
"Satellite dishes are being collected to cut off public access to the . . .
news of the global community. Women's groups, labor organizations, and
student groups are not permitted even the more peaceful acts of protest." 
As a result, however, of growing international concern about Malak Ghorbany,
partly from Mazahery's petition, the Islamic regime has stayed her execution
until she gets a new trial. But as Mazahery points out, Iran has used this
three-card-monte trick before. As she told World Net Daily: "It is quite
possible the Islamic regime will schedule a rush sham trial and reissue the
same sentence [and] even with a new trial, Ghorbany would still receive the
same sentence or be sentenced to death by public hanging instead." 
The pressure to save Malak Ghorbany must continue. The direct link to
Malak's petition, where you can sign on, is
petitiononline.com/Malak/petition.html. For related topics, and to link to
videos of actual public stonings, click on savemalak.googlepages.com/home. 
Keep in mind, Mazahery warns,"There are no scheduled dates for such killings
in Iran. A prisoner can be executed at any time with little or no notice at
all. Needless to say, that makes matters that much more complicated and
urgent in these types of cases." 
I shall return to this ongoing story and to Mazahery, whose own personal
story illuminates the barbarism of the rulers of Iran-where scores of
student dissenters are in prison and, as Ali Afshari and Akbar Atri report,
"the noose has been tightened around the neck of writers, journalists, and
bloggers in the past few months."

  _____  

Malak petition here <http://www.petitiononline.com/Malak/petition.html> 

  _____  

It is ironic that so many leftist women in this country do not express more
outrage at this type of thing. Yet, they are the first to point out
perceived evils of America to anyone who will listen. 

Islamic law is sick.. 

Meanwhile the ACLU, that great defender of liberty, is working hard to
ensure that men who think like this will have a clear path to attack us here
in the U.S. 

What a world we live in!
And then, there are items like this:
Honor Killing in
<http://littlegreenfootballs.com/weblog/?entry=22658_Honor_Killing_in_Birmin
gham&only>  Birmingham
>From the Western Resistance blog, savagery in suburban Britain: UK:
<http://www.westernresistance.com/blog/archives/002995.html>  Six Year Old
Girl Burned To Death For Muslim 'Honor'. (Hat tip: LGF readers.)  link: 272
comments
<http://littlegreenfootballs.com/weblog/?entry=22658_Honor_Killing_in_Birmin
gham#comments> 

  


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