Execution in Iran

The following is taken from the website of the Campaign to Defend Asylum Seekers (CDAS).Warning: the images may be distressing

Note -Senator Lyn Allison recently directed some pertinent questions to officials of the Department of Foreign Affairs during hearings of the Senate Estimates Committee. Extracts are posted on the email list for 13 June - http://www/topica.com/lists/mdc-watch/read - and the whole session can be read in Hansard, 06/06/2002 Estimates Committee, from page 383.

A young Iranian woman (25) was executed in a public square by [the] Islamic Iranian regime. The young women was accused of possession of cannabis. This is only one of the hundreds of execution that carried out by Iranian regime in a year. The Home Office is claiming Iran is a safe country therefore people could and should live in Iran peacufully. Let alone be political activist, ordinary people can not live without being prosecuted -in many case- executed for any basic human right.

preparing to hang noose in place

swinging from the noose

More photos, as displayed on 31 January 2003 during an action outside the Melbourne offices of DIMIA. Supporters of the National Council of Resistance of Iran (NCRI)demonstrated outside DIMIA in protest at attempts to pressure Iranian refugees to return to Iran. They held placards and displayed photos of public executions, floggings, and other evidence of the barbarity of the current regime, and demanded the release of all Iranian detainees in Australian camps. Please note - some of these photos may also be very distressing


Amnesty International Concern

Amnesty International today expressed its grave concern over the dramatic increase in executions carried out in Iran.

In the last two days alone, more than ten men have been hanged, some of them in public and some for offences which had no lethal consequences. According to media reports from Iran, 100 death sentences have been upheld in the Supreme Court this week alone and many more executions may be imminent.

"These developments in Iran fly in the face of international human rights standards -- stating that the death penalty, where it still exists, should only be used for the most serious crimes -- and the worldwide abolitionist trend: 109 states have now abolished the death penalty in law or practice," said Amnesty International. During one public execution in south eastern Tehran on Wednesday, Iranian police fired tear gas into the crowd as they threw sticks and stones in an attempt to prevent the hanging and reportedly appeal for clemency.

Amnesty International urges the authorities to urgently consider a moratorium on executions as called for by the UN Commission on Human Rights in 2000 and 2001. The organisation also calls for a review of the cases of all prisoners currently under sentence of death and renews its long-standing appeals for death sentences to be commuted, adding its voice to those of a number of Iranians who have publicly expressed their concern over this punishment.

"Judicial authorities must ensure that all prisoners are guaranteed every opportunity to defend themselves, including the right to appeal, and seek commutation of the sentence. International standards require that states that have not abolished the death penalty should only impose it for the most serious crimes, whose scope should not go beyond intentional crimes with lethal or other extremely grave consequences," Amnesty International stated.

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