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humanitarian news and analysis
a service of the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs


IRAN-IRAN: Activists condemn execution of gay teens


The two teenagers were executed on 19 July
Ankara, 25 July 2005 (IRIN) - Human rights groups the world over have strongly 
condemned the recent execution of two gay teenagers in northeastern Iran.

"It's entirely unacceptable that people are actually killed because of their 
sexuality," Kursad Kahramananoglu, head of the International Lesbian and Gay 
Association (ILGA), the oldest and only membership-based lesbian, gay, bisexual 
and transgender (LGBT) organisation in the world, maintained from Istanbul.

While exact details of the case remained unclear, he vowed if confirmed, ILGA 
would pursue the matter to the highest level, including the United Nations, 
noting a rise in homophobia in the world today. Kahramananoglu was not alone in 
his condemnation.

"Killing teenagers for what they do together is absolutely abhorrent," David 
Allison, spokesman for the London-based LGBT advocacy group Outrage said. He 
added that given that Iran was such an old civilisation, it was appalling that 
they should descend to such barbaric levels - especially against young people.

"To execute people simply because they are gay or have had gay sex just isn't 
acceptable in the 21st century," he exclaimed. Their comments follow the public 
hangings of Mahmoud Asgari, 16, and Ayaz Marhoni, 18, on 19 July in Mashad, 
provincial capital of Iran's northeastern Khorasan province, on charges of 
homosexuality.

Asgari had been accused of raping a 13-year-old boy, though Outrage believed 
those allegations were trumped up to undermine public sympathy for the two 
youths, both of whom maintain they were unaware homosexual acts were punishable 
by death, an AP news report said on Sunday.

"The judiciary has trampled its own laws," Asgari's lawyer, Rohollah Razez 
Zadeh, was quoted as saying, explaining that Iranian courts were supposed to 
commute death sentences handed to children to five years in jail, but the 
country's Supreme Court allowed the hangings to proceed.



Photo: Iranian Student's News Agency (ISNA)
Tuesday's public execution of the youths has drawn sharp criticism of Iran's 
legal system
Meanwhile on Saturday, Iran's Nobel Peace laureate Shirin Ebadi condemned the 
executions, reaffirming her determination to ban the execution of minors.

"My calls for a law banning execution of under-18s have fallen on deaf ears so 
far but I will not give up the fight," the AP quoted her as saying, calling the 
executions a violation of Iran's obligations under the International Convention 
on the Rights of the Child (CRC).

Prior to the boys' executions, the teenagers were held in prison for 14 months 
and severely beaten with 228 lashes. The length of their detention suggests 
that they committed the so-called offences more than a year earlier, when they 
were possibly around the age of 16, a statement by Outrage explained.

Citing Iranian human rights campaigners, Outrage claims over 4,000 lesbians and 
gay men have been executed since the Iranian revolution of 1979. In total, an 
estimated 100,000 Iranians have been put to death over the last 26 years of 
clerical rule, including women who had sex outside of marriage and political 
opponents of the Islamist government.

According to ILGA, Iran is one of at least seven countries today which still 
retain capital punishment for homosexuality. Others include Mauritania, Sudan, 
Afghanistan, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia and Yemen. The situation with regard to the 
United Arab Emirates (UAE) is unclear.

In the wake of the hangings, Amnesty International (AI) on Friday called on 
Tehran to put a final stop to state executions, explaining as a state party to 
the International Convention on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) and the CRC, 
Iran had undertaken not to execute anyone for an offence committed when they 
were under the age of 18.

For the past four years, the Iranian authorities have been considering 
legislation that would prohibit the use of the death penalty for offences 
committed by persons under the age of 18.

Under Article 1210(1) of Iran's Civil Code, the ages of 15 lunar years for boys 
and nine lunar years for girls are set out as the age of criminal 
responsibility, an AI statement said.

In January 2005, following its consideration of Iran's second periodic report 
on its implementation of the provisions of the CRC, the United Nations 
Committee on the Rights of the Child, the body of independent experts 
established under this Convention to monitor states parties' compliance with 
the treaty, urged Iran: "to take the necessary steps to immediately suspend the 
execution of all death penalties imposed on persons for having committed a 
crime before the age of 18, to take the appropriate legal measures to convert 
them to penalties in conformity with the provisions of the Convention and to 
abolish the death penalty as a sentence imposed on persons for having committed 
crimes before the age of 18, as required by article 37 of the Convention."


Copyright © IRIN 2013.




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