Akhir-akhir ini banyak berita penyalahgunaan larutan asam kuat,
bukan untuk reaksi kimia, tetapi untuk mencederai orang lain, terutama
kaum perempuan.
Motifnya beragam: cinta ditolak, melarang pergi sekolah, kehormatan, dll.
Laporan-laporan ini datang dari dunia Islam seperti Pakistan, Iran,
Bangladesh, Afghanistan.
Mengapa ini terjadi?

Banyak sumber berita dari media Barat, dan Anda punya pilihan untuk
lebih percaya
kepada eramuslim atau hidayatullah.com yang selalu menyalahkan propaganda Barat
untuk banyak masalah di dunia Islam.

Dari Iran. Tahun 2004, Ameneh Bahrami adalah seorang mahasiswi jurusan
elektronika di Teheran.
Gadis manis nan supel ini disukai teman-temannya, termasuk seorang mahasiswa
yuniornya, Aziz Mohavedi. Ketika Mohavedi mengutarakan perasaan cintanya,
dan mau melamarnya, Bahrami menolak dengan halus.
Mohavedi berang, frustrasi sampai berhari-hari,
mengancam bunuh diri, sampai akhrinya mengambil tindakan ekstrim:
menyiramkan asam!
Akibatnya sangat parah. Luka bakar yang diderita Ameneh Bahrami
meliputi wajah dan matanya.

Tim medis merekomendasikan Ameneh untuk berobat ke Barcelona, Spanyol.
Presiden Iran saat itu Mohammad Khatami membantu pembiayaannya.
Pengobatannya sangat sulit dan lambat, walaupun menunjukkan harapan
pemulihan pada
salah satu matanya. Masalah besar muncul ketika Khatami diganti oleh
Mahmud Ahmadinejad
yang menolak meneruskan pembiayaan. Pengobatan pun terhenti.

Setelah sempat terlunta-lunta di Spanyol, Ameneh kembali ke Iran.
Dia maju ke pengadilan untuk menuntut qisas terhadap Mohavedi.
Qisas, disiram asam balas siram asam hingga buta.
Pengadilan Iran, termasuk Ketuanya, Ayatullah Mahmoud Hashemi Shahroudi,
berusaha membujuk Ameneh untuk menerima diyat ketimbang menuntut qisas,
mengkhawatirkan publikasi buruk buat Iran.
Ameneh menolak. Dia tidak ingin musibah ini terulang kepada perempuan lain.
Akhirnya Pengadilan meluluskan gugatan, qisas berupa 5 tetes asam ke mata
terpidana Mohavedi. Saat ini Mohavedi punya kesempatan banding sebelum
hukuman dijalankan.

Kasus ini sedemikian tragis, sehingga banyak yang berhati-hati
untuk mengecam model hukuman qisas yang miris menjurus barbar ini.


http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/12/13/AR2008121302147.html

By Thomas Erdbrink
Washington Post Foreign Service
Sunday, December 14, 2008; A01

TEHRAN -- Ameneh Bahrami once enjoyed photography and mountain vistas.
Her work for a medical equipment company gave her financial
independence. Several men had asked for her hand in marriage, but the
hazel-eyed electrical technician had refused them all. "I wanted to
get married, but only to the man I really loved," she said.

Four years ago, a spurned suitor poured a bucket of sulfuric acid over
her head, leaving her blind and disfigured.

Late last month, an Iranian court ordered that five drops of the same
chemical be placed in each of her attacker's eyes, acceding to
Bahrami's demand that he be punished according to a principle in
Islamic jurisprudence that allows a victim to seek retribution for a
crime. The sentence has not yet been carried out.

The implementation of corporal punishments allowed under Islamic law,
including lashing, amputation and stoning, has often provoked
controversy in Iran, where many people have decried such sentences as
barbaric. This case is different.

Tehran journalist Asieh Amini, who writes about human rights and
opposes the sentence, said protest has been muted because people have
been moved by Bahrami's story. "It's hard not to get emotional over
what has happened to her," Amini said.

Bahrami, 31, said she has fought long and hard to obtain what she
views as justice.

"At an age at which I should be putting on a wedding dress, I am
asking for someone's eyes to be dripped with acid," she said in a
recent interview, as rain poured against the windows of her parents'
small apartment in a lower-middle-class neighborhood of Tehran. "I am
doing that because I don't want this to happen to any other women."

Some officials also said the punishment would be a deterrent.

"If propaganda is carried out on how acid attackers are punished, it
will prevent such crimes in the future," Mahmoud Salarkia, deputy
attorney general of Tehran, told reporters after the court issued its
ruling.

There are no statistics on the number of acid attacks against women in
Iran. "This is an extreme case of social violence, but crimes like
spouse and 'honor' killings are clearly on the rise in Iran," Amini
said. "These crimes are violent reactions to sexual limitations in
this country."

In public life, men and women are often segregated in Iran, and sex
before marriage is illegal.

Amini said she doubted that the sentence against Bahrami's attacker
would reverse the trend. "Social violence will not be cured with more
violence," she said.

In 2002, Bahrami was a 24-year-old electronics student at a university
in Tehran. She and her friends felt sorry for a sometimes bedraggled
younger student named Majid Movahedi, so they collected sweaters and
pants and asked a university staff member to pass them on to him.

"Ameneh was always nice to everybody," said her mother, Shahin,
carefully lifting a cup of tea to her daughter's lips.

Bahrami left a deep impression on Movahedi, even though the two had
never spoken.

"He was absolutely crazy about her," said Aziz Movahedi, Majid's
father. "At periods he would lock himself in his room, saying he only
wanted to marry her."

Bahrami didn't share his feelings. "I remember him as a strange boy
with an obsessive stare," she said. In 2003, Movahedi's mother called
Bahrami's parents to propose a marriage. "I politely declined,"
Bahrami said.

Movahedi, refusing to be turned down, began waiting outside her
workplace and stopping her in the street, crying that he would kill
himself if she didn't marry him.

Police said they could not act before a crime had been committed, so
Bahrami decided that she needed to act. "Things were out of control. I
was facing an unbalanced person," Bahrami said.

On Oct. 31, 2004, she approached Movahedi as he waited near her
office. "I made up a story that I had gotten engaged and was about to
marry. 'Continue with your life,' I told him. 'There is absolutely no
hope for us.' "

As she returned to her office, he vowed to kill her.

Three days later, on a cold, clear autumn afternoon, Bahrami was
walking home through one of Tehran's busy city parks when someone
tapped her on the shoulder. As she turned around, a burning fluid
splashed onto her face.

"It felt like my head was stuck in a bowl of boiling water," Bahrami
said. "I bent forward to allow the stuff to drip off my face, but the
pain was intolerable. I fell on the pavement, screaming for help."

In the interview, Bahrami recounted these events calmly. Her mother,
sitting next to her on a couch, held her daughter tightly.

Bahrami remembers a crowd gathering around her. "A bystander came with
a jerry can of water. I splashed it on my face, but that only caused
the acid to run down my arms onto my body."

Someone picked her up and took her to a nearby hospital. The doctors
ordered a worker to hose her down in the hospital's courtyard.

"They didn't take her clothes off or wash her eyes properly. That
could have softened the high degree of burns," said Farid Karimian, an
Iranian ophthalmologist who began treating Bahrami a couple of days
later. "She was a real mess."

Movahedi turned himself in to police two weeks after the attack.
During a preliminary hearing, he acknowledged attacking Bahrami and
was imprisoned to await trial.

"What was my sin? To want to choose freely in marriage?" Bahrami said.
"What was he thinking?"

Bahrami was transferred to a burn unit at another hospital, where she
had several surgeries over the next six months.

"All the time I had to sleep standing up. I was completely blinded," she said.

After the operations, doctors referred her to an eye clinic in
Barcelona for a last attempt to restore some of her vision.

But Bahrami had no insurance. Iran's president at the time, Mohammad
Khatami, who had heard Bahrami's story through her attorney,
personally paid a large portion of her bills and promised that the
government would make the remaining payments.

" 'You don't worry about anything; we'll take care of you,' they
said," Bahrami recalled.

Doctors at Barcelona's Instituto de Microcirugia Ocular, an eye
surgery hospital, were impressed by Bahrami. "She was an amazing
patient. So brave. She came to a foreign country, blind, without
knowing the language. She only wanted one thing: to be able to see
again," said Ramón Medel, an eyelid surgeon at the hospital.

Medel and other doctors focused on Bahrami's right eye, which was less damaged.

"After some operations, she could at least see some shadows," Medel
said. "But we needed to do more work on her."

In August 2005, almost a year after the attack, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad
became president, and the payments for Bahrami's medical costs and her
Barcelona apartment suddenly stopped.

Iran's ambassador to Spain at the time, Morteza Alviri, said he had
nightmares after meeting Bahrami. "I felt so sorry for her. I tried to
do what I could," he said. But when Ahmadinejad changed several
ambassadors, supporters of the previous government, Alviri was the
first to leave. "I don't know what happened to Ameneh after that," he
said.

Ahmadinejad's media adviser, Medhi Kalhor, said he could guess why the
payments were cut off. "Did Mr. Khatami throw the acid? No. He
shouldn't have paid for her out of the people's pocket," he said. "If
Bahrami was an old man with an ingrown toenail, no one would speak of
it. . . . There are so many people who need our help. We cannot just
pay for everybody."

Bahrami eventually was evicted from her apartment, and members of a
Spanish organization took her to a homeless shelter in Barcelona.

"After some days, I understood that I was surrounded by drug addicts,
drunkards and prostitutes," she said. "I cried so hard -- what had I
done to deserve all this?"

"It was a horrible, crazy place, where they had put her," said Amir
Sabouri, president of the Iranian Friendship Association of New York,
a charity that helps Iranians worldwide. Sabouri traveled to Spain to
help Bahrami after hearing about her plight.

Soon after, Bahrami felt fluid dripping from her right eye.

"Unfortunately her eye, which was very weak, gave out," Medel said.
"She must have caught some bacteria somewhere."

Bahrami returned to Tehran in June.

With little left to lose, Bahrami took the unusual step of asking the
court for qisas, or eye-for-an-eye retribution as allowed under
Islamic law.

Courts usually order families of the accused to pay "blood money" for
the crimes. But Bahrami insisted on the punishment. She had several
meetings with the head of Iran's judiciary, Ayatollah Mahmoud Hashemi
Shahroudi, who tends to favor less strict interpretations of Islamic
law.

"Shahroudi really pressed me to demand blood money instead of
retribution. He explained that such a sentence would cause lots of bad
publicity for Iran. But I refused," she said.

The judiciary did not respond to a request for an interview.

More than two weeks ago, Movahedi was led into court by two policemen.
He showed no remorse when the court ruled on the case. When the judge
asked whether he was ready for his punishment, Movahedi said that he
still loved Bahrami but that if she asked for his eyes to be taken
out, he would seek the same punishment for her.

"They must also completely empty out her eyes, since I'm not sure that
she cannot secretly see," he said. "The newspapers have made this a
huge case, but I haven't done anything bad."

Movahedi was sentenced to five drips of sulfuric acid in each eye. His
father said he was "incredibly sorry" for what had happened. "If
Ameneh is really blind, the verdict against my son must be
implemented," he said.

Under Iranian law, a convict has 20 days to appeal the verdict. If
Movahedi fails to do so, the punishment will be carried out on a date
decided by the judiciary.

Medel, the doctor in Barcelona, said he was shocked to hear that his
former patient had asked for another person's eyes to be taken out.

"I heard about that court case on the radio here in Spain," he said.
"I never linked it to Ameneh. It's a harsh sentence, but she really
had to go through a lot. I don't know what I would have done if she
had been my daughter."

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