http://tinyurl.com/673ymm9

 


An Eye for an Eye: Iran's Blinding Justice System


 
<http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/time/brand/SIG=8rhvp9/*http:/www.time.com>
Time.com

By AZADEH MOAVENI Azadeh Moaveni - Sun May 15, 1:35 am ET

Iran's judiciary has postponed the blinding of a man as punishment for
throwing acid in the face of a young woman in 2004, after she rejected his
offer of marriage. The delay came in the face of mounting outcry both inside
Iran and in the West over the sentencing, which is permissible under qesas,
a principle of Islamic law allowing victims analogous retribution for
violent crimes. 

The case has stirred passionate interest in Iran since 2004, when Majid
Movahedi, a university student, accosted Ameneh Bahrami on a Tehran street
and tossed a red bucket of sulfuric acid in her face. Bahrami, an attractive
young engineer, had repeatedly spurned Movahedi's proposals and reported his
harassment to the police. She was blinded and severely disfigured in the
attack, and has spent the intervening years between Iran and Spain
undergoing numerous unsuccessful operations to reconstruct her face and
repair her sight. (See photos of a semi-official view of Iran.)
<http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/time/wl_time/storytext/08599207152900/4147
5186/SIG=11vj6mcv2/*http:/www.time.com/time/photogallery/0,29307,1996165,00.
html> 

Much of the public outcry in Iranian media, news websites, and blogs,
surrounds the Iranian legal system, which produces such verdicts by
practising an 'eye for an eye' approach to justice based on seventh century
Islamic jurisprudence. These principles effectively offer victims of violent
crime two legal choices, forgiveness or qesas, analogous retribution.
"Bahrami must sit in the place of the judge and either forgive her attacker
or take revenge" says Asieh Amini, an Iranian women's rights activist living
in Europe? "The legal system pushes her into a dead-end, and it's really the
law that's deficient here." Bahrami eventually chose qesas, determined that
her experience would serve as deterrence for future crimes. "I want people
like him to know that they will suffer forever if they cause someone such
suffering," she said on BBC Persian television Saturday. 

Speaking on the interactive television program Saturday, Bahrami said she
favored a more modern course, suing for damages. "I want him to be punished
foremost. But if there are human rights considerations, then I'll accept two
million Euros and his life imprisonment," she said. The program featured an
emotional exchange between Bahrami and Movahedi's weeping mother, who begged
for her forgiveness. It drew a flood of callers from inside Iran, many of
them concerned that Bahrami's "forgiveness," while perhaps the most
humanitarian course, would encourage such a horrific crime by implying legal
leniency. "Ameneh, daughter of Iran, we understand your joy and we support
you," wrote a prominent Iranian blogger, Dalghak Irani, featured on the
program. (See photos of health care in Tehran.)
<http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/time/wl_time/storytext/08599207152900/4147
5186/SIG=11vf5e52a/*http:/www.time.com/time/photogallery/0,29307,1874914,00.
html> 

Bahrami, who was scheduled to herself administer the blinding drops to an
anaesthetized Movahedi, learned of the delay outside the Judiciary Hospital
in Tehran. Human rights groups and Western governments pleaded with Iranian
authorities last week to call off the punishment. Iran's government usually
responds to such foreign pressure by lashing out rather than backing off,
but Bahrami's case poses a unique dilemma: unlike many human rights cases
which excite opinion primarily in the West, it has resonated deeply
throughout Iranian society; the attention inside Iran raises the prospect of
a public backlash at a time when the regime is deeply divided by political
infighting. "There's no doubt public opinion inside Iran has been stirred
up," says Amini. "There's been a huge outpouring of sympathy for both of
them, and this puts pressure on the government." 

Apart from its headline-grabbing story line, the case is transfixing
Iranians because it reflects how their society's old mores are clashing with
modern norms. This was no village crime committed by an illiterate, but a
tragedy that unfolded in the nation's capital between two educated
urbanites. It underscores how Iranian women's social standing - they are now
in the majority at universities and active throughout society - fits
awkwardly with deep-seated patriarchal attitudes. Women direct top-grossing
films in Iran, run galleries, and write best-sellers, but are still covered
by cultural mores that often approximate the severe conservatism of
neighboring Afghanistan. "This case really highlights the sexist attitudes
and double standards within Iran society," says Nayereh Tohidi, an Iran
expert and a professor of women's studies at California State University,
Northridge. "[Based on] such customs, a man sees it as his prerogative to
want and possess the woman he desires, regardless of her feelings and mutual
love." Tohidi adds, "This 'eye for an eye,' tribal approach to crimes
underlies how the law reinforces a cycle of violence instead of reducing it.
A young blind man is going to be added to a young blind woman for society to
take care of."

 



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