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   Throwing Stones at Stoning... Interntiuonal condemnation of barbaric executions


15th January
2008
   Grotesque Iran...
 
Human rights groups protest against Iran's barbaric punishments

Stoning scene from filmIran's penal code lays down the size of stones crowds should use to bludgeon adulterers to death, Amnesty International has discovered.

This regulation is specifically designed to increase the suffering of the victims, according to an Amnesty report.

Article 104 of the Iranian penal code states the stones used should not be large enough to kill the person by one or two strikes, nor should they be so small that they could not be defined as stones.

Although Iran imposed a moratorium on such executions in 2002, two people were stoned to death in 2006 and one last year. Nine women and two men are under sentence of death by stoning. More women suffer this punishment because evidence from a man carries twice as much weight as a woman's in Iran's courts.

Kate Allen, the director of Amnesty UK, said: Execution by stoning is a grotesque penalty which the Iranian authorities should abolish immediately.

Meanwhile Nobel peace prize winner Shirin Ebadi's rights group have also protested against the amputation of hands and feet as a punishment in Iran, warning of "new dimensions" in rights violations.

Unfortunately, the violation of human rights in Iran has not only been expanded in some fields, it has also found new dimensions, the group of human rights lawyers led by Ebadi said in a statement.

In the past days, several criminals in the province of Sistan-Baluchestan were sentenced to the amputation of hands and legs for actions against security, it said. And the verdict has also been carried out.

 

1st February
2008
 Update:  Thrown Off a Cliff...
 
EU protests against Iran's barbaric punishments

Stoning scene from filmIn a declaration by the Presidency on January 25, the EU expresses concern over the executions in Iran and barbaric methods used to carry out death sentences.

The declaration denounced death sentences for juvenile offenders which are in total contravention of international norms and standards.

The EU is also deeply concerned by methods of execution used in Iran which fall below international standards for use of the death penalty and violate Iran's international human rights commitments (such as stoning). In this regard the EU is concerned that two men have been sentenced to death in Shiraz and face imminent execution by being 'thrown from a height' or ‘a cliff’. The EU calls on Iran to halt these executions and make a commitment not to apply such sentences in the future, the declaration stated.

The declaration which was also supported by 14 Candidate Countries to join the 27-nation European block reiterated, The EU condemns the increasing recourse to death sentences and executions in the Islamic Republic of Iran, and urges the Islamic Republic of Iran to abolish the death penalty in line with the resolution endorsed on 18 December 2007 by the United Nations General Assembly, on a moratorium on the use of the death penalty.

In a statement on January 20, the Iranian Resistance's President-elect, Mrs. Maryam Rajavi, strongly condemned escalation of barbaric violations of human rights in Iran, particularly the use of most inhuman methods of punishments and executions. In her statement she called on international and competent bodies not to keep silence over the unprecedented level of rights abuses by the mullahs' regime, and called it a crucial test for these bodies in circumstances where human rights and peace should be safeguarded.

 

2nd February
2008
   Learning about Barbarity...
 
Iranian teacher sentenced to death by stoning

Stoning scene from filmAn Iranian music teacher, Abdollah Farivar, has been sentenced to death by stoning, for having relations with one of his students.

Forty-nine year-old Farivar is married with two children.

The family of Farivar, insists that he did not commit adultery, since the teacher signed a timed marriage contract.

A timed marriage contract, or 'Sigheh' means a man and a woman enter into a legally binding, but temporary union, after agreeing on the length of the contract and the amount of compensation to be paid to the woman.

The contract has a background in Shia law and has been used as a measure for curbing prostitution and provides a way around Iran's restrictive laws that prevent pre-marital sexual relations.

The incident reportedly happened in the city of Sari, located in the northern Iran.

 

4th February
2008
   Stony Hearted...
 
Stoning barbarism continues in Iran

Stoning scene from filmTwo Iranian sisters convicted of adultery face being stoned to death after the supreme court upheld the death sentences against them.

The two were found guilty of adultery  after the husband of one sister presented video evidence showing them in the company of other men while he was away.

Branch 23 of the supreme court has confirmed the stoning sentence, said their lawyer, Jabbar Solati.

The penal court of Tehran province had already sentenced the sisters identified only as Zohreh, 27, and Azar (no age given) to stoning, the daily said.

Solati explained that the two sisters had initially been tried for "illegal relations" and received 99 lashes. However in a second trial they were convicted of "adultery."

The pair admitted they were in the video presented by the husband but argued that there was no adultery as none of the footage showed them engaged in a sexual act with other men.

There is no legal evidence whereby the judge could have the knowledge for issuing a stoning sentence, Solati said, adding that he had appealed to the state prosecutor. The two sisters have been tried twice for one crime, Solati protested.

The newspaper Etemad reported that the husband of the other sister, Azar, had not filed any complaint against her.

 

24th March
2008
 Update:  Reprieved from Stoning...
 
Iran Woman under threat of stoning freed after 11 years in jail for adultery

Stoning scene in filmAn Iranian woman under threat of being stoned to death for adultery has been freed, her lawyer has said.

Mokarrameh Ebrahimi was released from prison in Qazvin province on the orders of Iran's judiciary's amnesty commission, said her lawyer Shadi Sadr.

Ms Ebrahimi's partner, Jafar Kiani, was stoned to death in July 2007, causing an international outcry.

The reasons for Ms Ebrahimi's release are unclear, but Ms Sadr said rights campaigns had certainly played a part.

Human and women's rights groups in Iran and abroad had lobbied to prevent Ms Ebrahimi sharing the same fate as her partner.

She was freed after a total of 11 years in custody. Ms Ebrahimi was reportedly freed along with the son she had by Kiani, and is said to have returned with him to her family in northern Iran.

Amnesty International says a total of 12 people - mainly women - are currently at risk of being stoned to death in Iran.

 

10th July
2008
   Heresy Against Civilisation...
 
Sudan court sentences man to stoning for heresy against islam

Stoning scene in filmA Sudan court has sentenced a Sudanese citizen to death by stoning for heresy towards Islam.

The court gave the accused three days to repent and avoid the sentence.

This is the second time that a Sudanese citizen has been sentenced to death for heresy since 1983, when shari'a was implemented as the law of the land in Sudan.

 

21st July
2008
 Update:  Humanity Falls on Stony Ground...
 
Nine Iranians sentenced to stoning for adultery

Stoning scene in filmNine people in Iran, eight women and one man, have been sentenced to death by stoning after being convicted of adultery in verdicts lawyers blame on a resurgence of hardline Islamic fundamentalism.

The sentences have been imposed in courts across the country despite a supposed moratorium on the punishment, which Iran says is justified under sharia law.

Lawyers say most of the nine have been victims of violence and are mostly too ill-educated to understand the charges against them.

Many of the sentences were handed down after hearings held in private without the presence of witnesses and defence lawyers.

Details of the sentences were disclosed by Iranian lawyers yesterday in Tehran as they attempted to generate international support for a campaign to force Iran's government to abolish stoning.

These women mostly come from the illiterate masses and did not have money or access to a lawyer. Many did not understand Farsi and, of course, all the interrogations were in Farsi, Shadi Sadr, a prominent Iranian human rights lawyer, told the Guardian. In all of the cases, there has been violence against them, or they have been forced into marriages, or their divorce applications have been refused. In some cases, they couldn't apply for a divorce due to family pressures.

They came to light after a group of Iranian lawyers embarked on a campaign to halt stoning, which has been condemned by international human rights groups. The lawyers are calling on Iran's judiciary chief, Ayatollah Mahmoud Hashemi Shahroudi, to issue pardons.

However, Shahroudi's influence in the current political climate is believed to be limited. Last year, he ordered a stay of execution for a man condemned to be stoned for adultery but local officials carried out the sentence in violation of his orders.

 

29th July
2008
 Update:  Throwing Stones at Iran...
 
EU condemns Iran's 9 stoning sentences

Stoning scene in filmThe European Union's French presidency has condemned the planned stoning of eight women and one man sentenced to death for adultery, calling for a halt to their execution.

The European Union urges Iran to put an immediate stop to these executions and to commute the death sentences by stoning that have just been passed, the EU's French presidency said in a statement.

It said it was deeply concerned by the fate of the nine, stressing that Iran had pledged to introduce a moratorium on stoning.

 

6th August
2008
 Update:  Not So Stony Hearted...
 
Iran says it will relent on stonings

Stoning scene in filmIran has placed a new moratorium on the execution of people by stoning, the country's judiciary has announced.

At least nine people in the country are believed to be facing the sentence for a range of offences including adultery, prostitution and incest.

The judiciary's spokesman Alireza Jamshidi said four sentences had been commuted - two will now face long prison sentences and the other two will be flogged.

In a few other cases, these people have asked for forgiveness and their request ... is under review, he said.

 

14th September
2008
 Update:  Stoning On...
 
Iran still have prisoners awaiting execution by stoning

Stoning scene in filmA 30-year-old women prisoner identified as Gilan Mohammadi and an Afghan national, Gholamali Eskandari, are sentenced to death by stoning. Both are awaiting their sentences to be carried out in Isfahan prison central Iran.

Despite much smoke screening by the mullahs' judiciary last month regarding the commuting of all such rulings, there has not been any change made in these two cases.

 

28th October
2008
 Update:  Pits of Humanity...
 
A Somalia stoning

Stoning scene from movieThousands of people gathered Monday to witness 50 Somali men stone a woman to death after an Islamic court in the southern port of Kismayo found her guilty of adultery.

Aisho Ibrahim Dhuhulow, who had been found guilty of extra-marital intercourse was buried in the ground up to her neck while the men pelted her head with rocks.

The execution was carried in one of the city's main squares.

This afternoon we are telling the people of Kismayo that we are practising a punishment that is rare in this region and was carried out in Kismayo for the first time, Sheikh Hayakallah said.

Cameras were banned from the public stoning but print and radio journalists were allowed to attend.

 

1st November
2008
 Update:  The Shame of Humanity...
 
13 year old girl stoned to death in Somalia

Amnesty logoA girl stoned to death in Somalia this week was 13 years old, not 23, contrary to earlier news reports. She had been accused of adultery in breach of Islamic law.

Aisha Ibrahim Duhulow was killed on Monday 27 October, by a group of 50 men in a stadium in the southern port of Kismayu, in front of around 1,000 spectators.

Inside the stadium, militia members opened fire when some of the witnesses to the killing attempted to save her life, and shot dead a boy who was a bystander. An al-Shabab spokeperson was later reported to have apologized for the death of the child, and said the militia member would be punished.

At one point during the stoning, Amnesty International has been told by numerous eyewitnesses that nurses were instructed to check whether Aisha Ibrahim Duhulow was still alive when buried in the ground. They removed her from the ground, declared that she was, and she was replaced in the hole where she had been buried for the stoning to continue.

Aisha Ibrahim Duhulow was accused of adultery, but sources told Amnesty International that she had in fact been raped by three men, and had attempted to report this rape to the al-Shabab militia who control Kismayo. It was this act that resulted in her being accused of adultery and detained. None of men she accused of rape were arrested.

 

7th November
2008
 Update:  Sham Humanity...
 
UN condemns Somalia over stoning of child

UN logoThe United Nations condemned the stoning to death of a 13-year-old girl in Somalia who was found guilty of adultery after she was raped while traveling to visit her grandmother.

Aisha Duhulow was forced into a hole, buried up to her neck and pelted with stones by 50 men in a stadium full of spectators in the southern port city of Kismayo, the UN Children's Fund, Unicef, said. She pleaded for her life before the Oct. 27 execution, it added.

Duhulow was raped by three men and asked prosecutors for protection after the attack, according to Unicef. Instead, she was sentenced to death. A child was victimized twice -- first by the perpetrators of the rape and then by those responsible for administering justice, Unicef representative for Somalia Christian Balslev-Olesen said in a statement.

 

30th November
2008
 Update:  Blind Injustice...
 
Iranian sharia and the horror of an eye for an eye

Iran flagA jealous lover who blinded a woman with acid is also to be blinded with acid under the country's Islamic law.

A 27-year-old named only as Majid confessed to attacking Ameneh Bahrami in 2004 to dissuade anyone from marrying the woman he loved.

The ruling was issued based on the Islamic law system of 'qisas,' or eye for an eye retribution.

The reports say Ameneh asked the court to sentence Majid, who was only identified by his first name, to be blinded by acid to prevent similar attacks on other women.

Majid is allowed to appeal the verdict.

Stone Cold Evil

Based on article from google.com

Iran's supreme court has confirmed a sentence of death by stoning against a woman convicted of adultery in the southern city of Shiraz.

The woman identified as Afsaneh R., was also given a second death sentence for murdering her husband with the help of a man identified only as Reza, who had an affair with her, Etemad Melli newspaper reported. It said Reza had also been sentenced to 100 lashes for having an illegitimate relationship and 15 years in jail for collaborating in murder.

The report said the supreme court had in August confirmed verdicts first issued in April.

In August, the judiciary said it had scrapped the punishment in Iran's new Islamic penal code, whose outlines have been adopted by the parliament but its details are yet to be debated by MPs before final approval and coming into effect.

 

4th January
2009
 Update:  The Evil that Men Do...
 
Iranian court approves another stoning

Stoning scene from movieThe 27th Iranian Court District has approved of the stoning of a Afsaneh, woman from Shiraz, Iran.

The original stoning order of this woman came from the 5th Court District in Shiraz in Fars Province. It was then appealed to a higher court in the country, who approved the decision.

The court came to the conclusion that the defendant purposefully and consciously chose to commit murder. Her partner and accomplice to the murder, a man named Reza, was sentenced to 15 years in jail with 100 lashes.

The defendant's appeal to a higher court was rejected. This comes at a time when the spokesman for the Iranian Judiciary announced in a press conference that Iran would no longer enforce the law of stoning for any of the accused.

Gholamhossein Raesi, head of the Lawyers for Human Rights commission in the Fars province stated: This order was based on the 'knowledge' of 'feeling' of one Judge, and contradicts the law of Islam on punishments for adultery.

He explained that the crime of adultery could be proven two ways. First is based on the confession of the accused. The second is based on eye-witnesses. Therefore, according to law 99 in the Islamic criminal code, the judge's knowledge or feeling is illegitimate when trying the crime of adultery.

 

12th January
2009
 Update:  Continuing Inhumanity...
 
2 men executed by stoning in Iran

Stoning scene from movieTwo men have been stoned to death for adultery at a cemetery in the northeastern Iranian city of Mashhad while a third escaped with his life, the Iranian newspaper Etemad Melli reported.

One of them named Mahmoud, an Afghan national, was able to save himself from the stoning hole with serious injuries, but two others died, it said.

Iran's judiciary chief Ayatollah Mahmoud Hashemi Shahrudi issued an ineffective directive in 2002 imposing a moratorium on such executions.

The group quoted by Etemad Melli voiced concern at the stoning sentence being carried out contrary to Ayatollah Hashemi Shahrudi's order and called on the authorities to put an end to this punishment.

Under Iran's Islamic law, adultery is still theoretically punishable by stoning, which involves the public hurling of stones at the convict buried up to his waist. A woman is buried up to her shoulders. The convict is spared death if he can free himself from the hole.

 

20th January
2009
 Update:  Pariah State...
 
Iran internationally condemned for recent stonings

EU flagThe European Union strongly condemns new cases of execution by stoning in the Islamic Republic of Iran

According to official confirmation and reports from other credible sources, three people were subject to execution by stoning in the city of Mashhad in the week beginning 21 December 2008. One of the three is reported to have managed to escape the stoning pit and survived. The other two were less fortunate and were stoned to death.

The European Union requests that the central authorities of the Islamic Republic of Iran investigate this issue, and ensure that the practice of execution by stoning is effectively and permanently terminated in the country, in compliance with the International Covenant of Political and Civil Rights, which the Islamic Republic of Iran has signed and ratified, as well as the Declaration on the Protection of All Persons From Being Subjected to Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment, as adopted by the UN General Assembly Resolution 3452 of December 1975, which Iran has approved.

Based on article from iranvnc.com

Amnesty logoAmnesty International condemned the execution by stoning of two men in Iran’s northeastern city of Mashhad that was carried out last month.

The London-based human rights group urged Iranian authorities to enact a law unequivocally banning stoning as a legal punishment.

Amnesty added: Pending the adoption of such a law, an immediate and effective moratorium on executions by stoning should be implemented.

Based on article from google.com

US flagThe United States joined international condemnation of the stoning death of two men in Iran for adultery, demanding an end to such cruel and unusual punishment there.

The United States joins the international community in expressing concern about the inhumane practice of stoning in the Islamic Republic of Iran, State Department spokesman Sean McCormack said in a statement.

This cruel and unusual punishment is an inhumane practice that does not meet the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, which Iran has ratified. We call on Iran not only to permanently abolish the practice of stoning, but to offer all defendants fair and transparent trials.

 

21st January
2009
 Update:  Slightly Less Barbaric...
 
Iran commutes stoning sentence to 100 lashes

Iran flagIran's judiciary chief Ayatollah Mahmoud Hashemi Shahrudi has commuted a sentence of stoning to death handed down to a woman convicted of adultery to 100 lashes.

The woman, identified as 48-year-old Kobra N, was convicted of being an accessory to the murder of her husband and engaging in an adulterous relationship. She was sentenced to eight years in prison for the first crime and stoning to death for the second.

The report said the woman served the eight-year jail sentence and was kept in prison for another five years awaiting the sentence of stoning to be carried out.

Ayatollah Shahrudi's decision to spare the woman leaves nine other people, seven women and two men, in Iranian prisons awaiting execution by stoning.

In August, the judiciary said it had scrapped the punishment in Iran's new Islamic penal code, whose outlines have been adopted by parliament but whose details are yet to be debated by MPs before final approval.

 

22nd January
2009
 Update:  Less Barbaric by 2...
 
Sisters saved from stoning but others still facing death

Iran flagIhe Iranian judiciary is to free two sisters sentenced to death by stoning for adultery, after they were cleared of the charges in a retrial, a press report said today.

Sisters Zohreh and Azar Kabiri were arrested in February 2007 after the husband of one of them presented a film allegedly showing them with other men.

Last week Tehran penal court judges acquitted the two sisters of adultery in a retrial and they will be freed soon', the reformist Etemad daily said.

In August 2007 the two received 99 lashes for an illegitimate relationship' and were then freed. They were later rearrested and sentenced in November 2007 to death by stoning for adultery.

The verdict was halted after Iran's judiciary chief Ayatollah Mahmoud Hashemi Shahrudi said the video was not sufficient evidence for the ruling and that their living conditions had not been considered in the trial, the report said. Their lawyer argued that the defendants could not be tried twice for the same offence.

Zohreh and Azar's husbands had withdrawn their complaint, declaring that the women in the video footage were not their wives, Etemad said.

Based on article from amnesty.org.uk

Gilan Mohammadi (female) and Gholamali Eskandari (male) are believed to have been detained since 2003. They are held in Esfahan Central Prison, in the centre of the country.

Amnesty International members are urging the authorities not to execute Gilan Mohammadi and Gholamali Eskandari and calling on them to order an immediate and effective moratorium on executions by stoning. The organisation is also urging the Iranian authorities to enact a law unequivocally banning stoning as a legal punishment.

Amnesty International UK Director Kate Allen said: Stoning is a sickening punishment, specifically designed to maximise suffering. The Iranian authorities should abandon it immediately. We urge people in the UK to get behind the campaign within Iran to stop stoning forever, and to help us save Gilan Mohammadi and Gholamali Eskandari.

 

22nd February
2009
 Update:  From Worse to Bad...
 
Iran commutes a stoning to hanging

HangingAn Iranian man who was sentenced to death by stoning after he was found guilty of having illicit relations with a teenage girl has been hanged.

Abdullah Fareivar, a 50-year-old music teacher, was hanged on Thursday in a prison in the northern town of Sari.

It said Fareivar was sentenced to death despite his family saying his relations with the 17-year-old girl were not illicit as he had entered into a contract marriage with her and that his first wife was aware of it.

 

26th February
2009
 Update:  Stony Hearted...
 
Iran stoning pardon turned down

Stoning scene from movieThe Amnesty and Pardon Committee of Iran’s Judiciary has rejected the request by its chief, Ayatollah Seyyed Mahmoud Hashemi-Shahroudi, regarding the pardon for a woman sentenced to death by stoning, and instead emphasized that the sentence must be carried out.

According to Iran’s Labor News Agency, ILNA, Ashraf K. was arrested on charges of adultery and complicity to commit murder in 2001, and one year later she was sentenced to stoning and 15 years imprisonment. Five years later, Shahroudi recommended that the stoning sentence be suspended and that instead she should serve the 15 year sentence.

In an interview with BBC Persian Service, Shadi Sadr, Ashraf K.’s defense attorney, said that the Amnesty and Pardon Committee of the Judiciary rejected Shahroudi’s recommendation after two years, and voted for the stoning to be carried out, and that this has increased the likelihood that this sentence would be carried out.

 

27th February
2009
 Update:  What is wrong in it?...
 
Extremist London councillor advocates stoning for adultery

Stoning scene from moviePoliticians in Brent are calling for the resignation of a councillor after he advocated the introduction of Sharia law for British Muslims on a website, including the death penalty for women who commit adultery.

Councillor Atiq Malik, (Not So Democratic Conservative Group), wrote two blogs, one on the UK Polling Report website and one on the Conservative Home website. Both read:

If Muslims living in the UK are happy that disputes be decided by Sharia courts then what?

The reason why male gets more share than women is that male members of the family have the responsibility to provide living expenses to female members of the family.

If an unmarried woman has an affair she is lashed 100 times. If a married woman has an affair she is stoned to death. What is wrong in it?

Politicians from different parties have been outraged by the remarks and believe he should step down from his post.

Councillor Ann John, leader of the Labour group, said: I was pretty shocked and I don't think he is fit to hold office. He should resign. He should be challenging his religion. It is disgusting.

To think that whipping and stoning women to death is okay is appalling. We live in a liberal and democratic society but we still have a long way to go. Saying that this is acceptable whether here or anywhere else is not right.


Councillor Bob Blackman, leader of Conservative group, said: We live in the UK and our system of law works well for us. We can tolerate people having different views but such extremism renders him unfit to be a politician. These comments confirm the wisdom of the group to expel him and if the group had not already told him to leave then it would do now.

 

9th March
2009
 Update:  Still the Pits of Humanity...
 
Amnesty International highlights 8 women at risk of stoning in Iran

Amnesty logoAs many as eight woman are at imminent risk of being stoned to death for adultery in Iran, according to reports received by Amnesty International. The organisation is calling on the Iranian authorities to commute the sentences and to impose an immediate moratorium on stonings.

Ultimately Iran should abolish death by stoning completely and should stop executing people for the crime of adultery, said Amnesty. Serious failings in the Iranian justice system, which disproportionately affect women, commonly result in unfair trials in capital and other cases.

Amnesty International UK Director Kate Allen said:

Stoning people to death is an inhumane punishment, specifically designed to increase the suffering of the victim. The Iranian authorities should abolish stoning immediately, and should abandon the practice of executing people for committing adultery.

Women are not treated equally in Iran, in the home and in the courts, and this means that they are particularly at risk.

Women and men inside Iran are fighting for an end to this horrendous practice and in some cases they have met with success. But we must show them international support.


Ashraf Kalhori was scheduled to be stoned to death for adultery with her neighbour - a charge she now denies - in July 2006 but her execution was stayed. She was also sentenced to 15 years' imprisonment for taking part in her husband's murder. Iranian media are now reporting that the Amnesty and Clemency Commission has rejected her plea and that her sentence could now be implemented at any time.

Another woman, known as Iran, is also at risk of execution by stoning. She was attacked by her husband when he saw her talking to the son of a neighbour, and while she was unconscious the neighbour's son killed her husband. Iran initially confessed to adultery during police interrogation, but later retracted her confession. A court in Khuzestan province sentenced Iran to five years' imprisonment for complicity in her husband's murder, and to death by stoning for adultery. The stoning sentence was overturned in June 2007 and she was retried, but was again sentenced to stoning. Her case has been before the Amnesty and Clemency Commission for over a year.

Anti-stoning campaigners in Iran have also highlighted the case of Khayrieh, who was sentenced to death in Khuzestan for complicity in the murder of her husband, and death by stoning for adultery. A relative of her husband, with whom she had an affair, murdered Khayrieh's husband, who was subjecting her to domestic violence. Khayrieh has denied any involvement in her husband's murder, but has acknowledged adultery and so is at risk of execution by stoning.

A woman known as Afsaneh R was also sentenced to stoning for adultery as well as to qesas ('retribution') for the murder of her husband, by a court in Fars, southern Iran, on 9 April 2008. This was confirmed by the Supreme Court on 4 August 2008, the same day on which Judiciary spokesman Ali Reza Jamshidi restated that executions by stoning in Iran were suspended.

Four other cases have also recently been discovered by anti-stoning campaigners in Iran. A woman known only as "H", and another identified only as "M.Kh" are both under sentence of stoning. An unnamed man and woman are also believed to be held under sentence of stoning in Tabriz Prison. Another woman and a man, Gilan Mohammadi and Gholamali Eskandari are also at risk of stoning, although Judiciary spokesman Ali Reza Jamshidi said on 27 January that their cases were being reviewed.

 

24th April
2009
 Update:  A Rasht of Barbarity...
 
Secret executions by stoning continue in Iran

Stoning scene from movieA man was secretly stoned to death in northern Iran in February and another man is only days away from facing a similar fate, The Tehran-based online daily Rooz has reported.

The report  said that in the case of the man who was stoned in the city of Rasht in February, judicial sources did not hand over the body to his family for burial to keep details of his execution from leaking to the press.

The main opposition coalition, the National Council of Resistance of Iran, citing ‘reliable sources’, said a man, identifed as Vali Azad was 'secretly' stoned to death in a prison in Rasht. It said that the stoning sentence, handed down by Judge Kashani, was carried out in a remote part of the yard of Lakan Prison in the presence of a few prison officials.

Rooz reported that another stoning sentence will be carried out in the coming days in Rasht. The judiciary in Gilan Province (northern Iran) is getting ready to carry out the sentence, which is a serious cause for concern among human rights activists, the report said. It identified the man awaiting the sentence as Mohammad Ali Navid Khamami.

 

13th May
2009
 Update:  Commuted from Barbarity to Inhumanity...
 
Couple given 6 years and 700 lashes for adultery in Saudi

Stoning scene from movieA Sri Lankan couple sentenced to death by stoning in Saudi Arabia received a reduced sentence following an appeal filed by the Sri Lankan Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

They were given a reduced sentence of 700 lashings and six years in prison for committing adultery, Deputy Foreign Minister Hussain Bhaila said.

The two suspects had been living together without being formally married.

 

23rd June
2009
 Update:  Iran Seeing the Light?...
 
Iran suggests backing off from inhumane punishments

Iran flagIranian lawmakers are mooting legislation that would outlaw harsh punishment methods such as stoning and amputations, Iran's official news agency IRNA said on Monday.

Ali Sharokhi, who is the president of the Iranian judiciary commission said MPs are eyeing legal amendments to make illegal stoning, cutting off the hands of thieves, amongst other 'Islamic' punishments.

Currently, stoning, or lapidation is a legal punishment for crimes such as adultery, prostitution, and incest.

 

26th June
2009
 Update:  Dramatic Condemnation...
 
New movie highlights Iranian injustice and the evil of stoning

The Soning of Soraya M. film posterAn Iranian woman is framed for adultery, then bound, gagged and buried to her waist in dirt before being stoned to death in a bloody and harrowing sequence in a new film in US cinemas this week.

The movie, The Stoning of Soraya M., is a dramatization based on the bestselling book of the same name by a French-Iranian journalist about a woman's death in an Iranian village in 1986.

The film aims to give a dramatic condemnation of the practice, which still occurs in countries including Iran, Afghanistan, Pakistan and Somalia, Nowrasteh told Reuters.

This is overdue and it has been too long suppressed as an issue for open discussion, said the US-born director, who is of Iranian descent and spent part of his childhood in Iran: Fundamentally this film is about injustice.

The film stars exiled Iranian actress Shohreh Aghdashloo, whose character tells a passing journalist the story of her murdered niece, who was framed for infidelity by her divorce-seeking husband.

Those who say the stoning in this film is graphic should see a real one, Aghdashloo said.

 

29th June
2009
 Update:  Somali Pits of Humanity...
 
Somali man stoned to death

Somalia flagHardline Islamist militiamen in Somalia have stoned to death a man accused of raping and murdering a woman.

The execution took place in front of a large crowd in the town of Wanlaweyn, about 90km south of the capital Mogadishu.

The man was convicted by an unofficial court set up by the al-Shabab movement: This man was accused of raping and killing an 18-year-old girl in May this year. The court found him guilty of the charges brought against him, Sheikh Mohamed Saleban, a local al-Shabab official, told AFP news agency. He was a married man, which is why the court sentenced him to be stoned to death, he added, explaining that a rape conviction only incurs flogging.

Local resident Abdullahi Husein said most of the town's population turned out to watch the lynching, where gunmen banned cameras and mobile phones: Ten masked men from the al-Shabab forces stoned him to death in front of everyone. They had dug a hole, buried him to his neck before throwing stones at him, he told AFP.

 

10th August
2009
 Update:  Stoning in Turkey...
 
Medieval realities of life parts of Turkey

Stoning scene from movieLast month a woman named Semse Allak was buried in a corner of a municipal cemetery in Turkey. She, unmarried and pregnant, had died from a stoning.

When she died on June 7, no-one from her family and relatives claimed her body and attended the funeral.

Villagers and local lawyers said Ms. Allak - as well as the man who had made her pregnant - had been killed to restore the 'honor' of their murderous families.

For seven months after her stoning, Ms. Allak lay semi-conscious, her skull crushed, unable to move or speak. Relatives visited once, in the beginning, to tell the hospital staff that they could not pay for her care. The fetus inside Ms. Allak died six weeks after the attack.

Just two days before Ms. Allak's funeral, the elected Parliament of this predominantly Muslim nation approved a sweeping human rights law that, among other things, abolished a provision that often reduced the prison terms for murders committed in the name of "family honor."

The legislation is part of a broader effort to secure Turkey's long-hoped-for admission to the European Union and, more profoundly, to answer the centuries-old question of Turkey's place in the world: whether in Europe or the Middle East.

The death of Ms. Allak underscores the distance between legislative pronouncements emanating from Ankara, Turkey's modern capital, and the sometimes grim, medieval realities of everyday life in other parts of the country.

"Honor is not a trivial thing," shouted Celilie Allak, Ms. Allak's sister-in-law, explaining the deaths. "What else were we supposed to do?"

Ms. Allak's brother, Mehmet, as well as four other relatives, have been charged in the murder of the man, Hila Acil, who was stoned to death at the same time in a field outside town. Despite last month's legislative changes, Mr. Allak's lawyer, Salih Demirkesen, said he was confident the local judges would understand.

 

25th August
2009
 Update:  Still a Stone's Throw from Humanity...
 
Iranian set to be stoned despite supposed ban on the barbaric punishment

Stoning scene from movieAn Iranian man convicted of adultery is to be stoned to death despite a moratorium being agreed by the judiciary last year.

Naghi Ahmadi was sentenced to death by stoning in June last year in the northern city of Sari, after he visited a married woman's home in the night while her husband was away working in another city, the Sarmayeh newspaper reported.

According to Ahmadi's lawyer, the verdict was declared after the woman and his client confessed to their adultery. The report did not explain why the woman was not convicted.

A year ago the judiciary said it would scrap the punishment in Iran's new Islamic penal code.

The outlines of the moratorium have been adopted by the Tehran parliament but are yet to be debated by its members.

 

13th September
2009
 Updated:  Indonesia Going Barbaric...
 
Aceh set to extend sharia with stoning for adultery

Stoning scene from movieMuslims in Indonesia's staunchly Islamic province of Aceh could be publicly stoned for committing adultery under a new law that the autonomous province's legislature is scheduled to pass next Monday.

With partial syariah law already in place under the autonomy accorded to end three decades of separatist conflict, Aceh looks set to take a giant and controversial step with the law, the Jakarta Globe reported.

The new legislation also mandates that single Muslims caught having premarital sex will get 100 lashes.

The plan has received support from some groups, but criticisms from others who said it might be illegal under Indonesian law. There is also the view that Aceh should be fixing its governance and not introducing such laws.

The plan will add to other laws already in place in some regions, pointing to creeping Islamisation in Indonesia.

The new Aceh punishments are part of a regional regulations Bill on local customs regarding Islamic crimes that the Aceh provincial legislature will endorse, said Raihan Iskandar, deputy chairman of the body.

Update: Barbaric Debate

13th September 2009. Based on article from abc.net.au

Indonesia's staunchly Muslim Aceh province asked provincial politicians to hold off including stoning to death as a punishment for married adulterers in a new bill set to pass into law.

Aceh's provincial parliament is scheduled to pass the new strict form of Islamic criminal law on Monday.

For the time being, we do not agree that stoning people to death should be included in the punishment for married adulterers, Aceh provincial secretary Husni Bahri Top said: There should be an in-depth assessment based on various sources in the Koran, opinions from Islamic preachers and an assessment of the techniques for how to implement it.

The bill currently stipulates that unmarried people who commit adultery should be caned one hundred times and married people should be stoned to death.

 

15th September
2009
 Update:  Indonesia Goes Barbaric...
 
Aceh to introduce stoning for adultery

Stoning scene from movieMPs have passed a law to stone to death married adulterers in the Indonesian province of Aceh.

The law, which will come into effect in 30 days, also decrees that homosexuals could be caned and jailed for eight years.

Those convicted of rape or consuming alcohol could be face up to 200 lashes of the cane meted out in public.

The 69-seat house in the semi-autonomous province voiced no reservations over the new law, an extension of the Sharia code already in force.

The new law imposes tough sentences and fines, to be paid in kilograms of gold, for rape and paedophilia.

But the most severe article was on adultery, which orders that offending married couples can be punished by at least 100 lashes, up to the harshest punishment of being stoned to death.

The provincial government initially proposed the new law, but now opposes some of the new clauses added by parliament.

But Bustanul Arifin, secretary of Aceh parliament's special committee for drafting the law, and a member of the Prosperous Justice Party (PKS), was unrepentant: We feel that it is time now for people to understand the real meaning of Sharia.

 

18th September
2009
 Update:  Cruel Justice...
 
Calls for Indonesia to review barbaric laws

Amnesty logoA new Indonesian bylaw that endorses stoning to death for adultery and caning of up to 100 lashes for homosexuality should be repealed immediately, Amnesty International have said.

The new criminal bylaw flies in the face of international human rights law as well as provisions of the Indonesian constitution, said Sam Zarifi, Amnesty International’s Asia-Pacific director: Stoning to death is particularly cruel and constitutes torture, which is absolutely forbidden under all circumstances in international law.

Indonesia’s central government has indicated that the law may contravene Indonesia’s existing human rights protections under the country’s constitution.

We welcome the concerns expressed by different levels of the Indonesian government about these laws, Zarifi said: But the proof is in the doing, and as long as these laws stay on the books they pose a serious threat to Indonesia’s international human rights obligations.

Amnesty International has urged Aceh's newly elected legislature, due to take office in October, to repeal the law as matter of urgent priority. Amnesty International has also called on the new legislature to ensure that all local regulations in Aceh are in full conformity with international human rights law and standards.

Supreme Court Review

Based on article from thejakartapost.com

Indonesia flagIndonesia's Home Affairs Minister Mardiyanto says the government will ask the Supreme Court to review the Islamic criminal code newly-endorsed in Aceh, which condemns adulterers to death by stoning.

Mardiyanto said that he was coordinating with Justice and Human Rights Minister Andi Mattalatta, who is scrutinizing contentious articles in the bylaw endorsed by the Aceh legislative council.

The government and the public can voice their objections to the qanun [sharia bylaw]; they can demand the Supreme Court review the bylaw if they consider it wrong or improper. The government will no doubt do that, Mardiyanto said.

Aceh is part of Indonesia, so it must respect the Constitution and the laws of the country. And remember, Aceh should not be issuing bylaws that are detrimental to its people. Investors will refuse to come, people will be afraid to visit Aceh... They have to take those things into account.

 

29th September
2009
 Update:  Stones on Hold...
 
Aceh government refuse to sign sharia stoning law

Indonesia flagThe Aceh provincial government will not sign the controversial Islamic bylaw allowing adulterers to be stoned to death, an official said. Hamid Zein, the head of the legal bureau of the Aceh governor's office, said that the administration had firmly rejected the bylaw passed by the legislative council on Monday.

As long as the executive and legislative bodies do not settle differences in the application of capital punishment by stoning, the Aceh government will not sign the bylaw, Hamid said.

In the deliberation he said government representatives had repeatedly stated objections to the inclusion of the stoning penalty for adulterers in the Islamic criminal code (jinayat). Aceh is the country's only province with special provisions allowing it to have Islamic sharia-based laws.

However, following initial endorsement of the bylaw, Home Minister Mardiyanto said the government would file a review to the Supreme Court, saying the bylaw was detrimental to the Acehnese and would frighten visitors and investors, as well as possibly not respecting the national Constitution.

Update: Human Rights Watch Unimpressed by Torture in Indonesia

13th October 2009. See article from hrw.org

Human Rights watch logoA new criminal bylaw passed by the provincial parliament of Aceh imposes torture, violates basic rights to privacy, and fails to protect victims of sexual violence, Human Rights Watch said today. Human Rights Watch urged the Indonesian government to review and reject all provisions relating to the death penalty, stoning, and flogging, and called on the Ministry of Home Affairs to overturn the law immediately.

Stoning and flogging constitute torture in any circumstances, said Elaine Pearson, deputy Asia director at Human Rights Watch. Imposing these draconian punishments on private, consensual conduct means the government can dictate people's intimate lives.

In addition to criminalizing all sex outside of marriage, the new law fails to criminalize marital rape and introduces discriminatory and unjust evidentiary requirements to prove rape. In doing so, the law places sexual assault victims at risk of being punished for engaging in illegal sexual conduct, instead of providing victims of violence or abuse with clear channels for redress.

The new Aceh law flies in the face of the Indonesian Constitution, which confers an irrevocable right to freedom from torture, Pearson said. Further, Indonesian national law does not criminalize consensual homosexual conduct or recognize stoning as punishment for any crime.

The law violates fundamental principles of international human rights, including the rights to life and freedom from torture or cruel, inhuman, or degrading treatment or punishment, protected in articles 6 and 7 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR). The UN Committee Against Torture, which monitors the implementation of the Convention Against Torture, has unconditionally recognized stoning and flogging as torture. Indonesia ratified the Convention Against Torture in 1998 and acceded to the convention in 2006. Aceh's Islamic Criminal Code directly contravenes Indonesia's obligations under these conventions.

Human Rights Watch also called on the national government and the new Acehnese parliament to reject the proposed criminalization of consensual sexual conduct among adults, including homosexual, premarital, and extramarital sexual conduct. It is incumbent upon the Indonesian government to stand up for the rights of all its people and reject these measures, Pearson said.

 

6th October
2009
 Update:  Freed from the Pits of Humanity...
 
Iranian man and woman escape stoning on appeal

Stoning scene from movieAn Iranian man and woman convicted of adultery and who faced death by stoning have been freed on appeal after spending six years behind bars, ILNA news agency has reported.

It said that Gholam Ali Eskandari and Gilan Mohammadi were released in the central city of Isfahan after their defence lawyers won the appeal.

In August 2008, the judiciary said it would scrap stoning as a punishment in Iran's new Islamic penal code, the outlines of which have been adopted by parliament the details have yet to be debated by MPs.

 

16th October
2009
 Update:  Stones on Hold...
 
Indonesian government signal that stoning law will be unacceptable

Indonesia flagA new law to fatally stone adulterers is unlikely to survive government review in Indonesia, but it highlights the latest push toward stricter Islamic law in the semi-autonomous Aceh province.

The law was unanimously rushed through the provincial parliament last month by outgoing lawmakers, who are part of the hardline Prosperous Justice Party. In addition to the death sentence for adultery, it calls for the public flogging of homosexuals.The law also dismisses a rape victim's claims unless she can provide four male witnesses to the assault.

It is very unlikely the law will be implemented, foreign ministry spokesman Teuku Faizasyah said this week. The governor has already made it clear he won't support the legislation. The new sharia law contravenes national law and can be overturned if the province doesn't act first, Faizasyah said.

First, I don't think the local government will approve the legislation, he said. Second, if there is approval -- and we're talking 'if' -- it still can't be implemented if it contradicts legislation at the national level.

The province on the northern tip of the island of Sumatra has long enjoyed relative autonomy from the central government. It was permitted to adopt a semi-independent legal system in the early 2000s on the condition that it give up its demand for independence after a 30-year insurgency.

 

8th November
2009
 Update:  Inhumanity in Somalia...
 
Man stoned to death for adultery

Somalia flagIslamists in southern Somalia have stoned a man to death for adultery but 'spared' his pregnant girlfriend until she gives birth.

Abas Hussein Abdirahman, 33, was killed in front of a crowd of some 300 people in the port town of Merka.

He was screaming and blood was pouring from his head during the stoning. After seven minutes he stopped moving, an eyewitness told the BBC.

An official from the al-Shabab group said the woman would be killed after she has had her baby.

Islamist groups run much of southern Somalia, while the UN-backed government only control parts of the capital.

Al-Shabab official Sheikh Suldan Aala Mohamed claimed Abdirahman had confessed to adultery before an Islamic court.

 

11th November
2009
 Update:  Human Rights Defender's Tulip...
 
Award for woman helping Iranians in danger of stoning

Human Rights Defenders TulipShadi Sadr has helped Iranian women with free legal assistance and has started a campaign against stoning.

She's been awarded one of the foremost Dutch human rights prizes, the Human Rights Defenders Tulip Award. But not before experiencing the regime's violence against women first-hand.

They beat me and forced me to go with them, Shadi Sadr tells Dutch radio. She was detained last July in the wake of popular protests against president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, and brought to the notorious Evin Prison in Tehran. Her interrogators knew exactly who she was.

In 2004, Sadr had founded Raahi: an organisation for women in legal trouble. Because Iranian women have few rights and even less independent access to funds, they're often helpless in court. Raahi offered them free legal assistance, until the authorities closed it down.

She began a campaign to defend women who are sentenced to stoning, she says. Because the victims of this traditional - and in the eyes of many barbaric - form of punishment are almost never men.

When she was detained in July, her interrogators at Evin Prison accused her of being controlled by foreign powers out to overthrow president Ahmadinejad.

The Dutch government has awarded her the Human Rights Defenders Tulip Award for her extraordinary courage. But, she says, it's not just her struggle that's being recognized in this way.

She dedicates the award - which she received from Dutch foreign minister Maxime Verhagen in The Hague - to all the people in Iran who fight every day to get their rights. Despite the fact that the protests against the president's re-election were crushed, she remains optimistic.

Projects The Human Rights Defenders Tulip Award comes with a stipend of 10,000 euros. In addition, it includes funding of up to 100,000 euros for projects proposed by the winner, to further promote her or his cause.

 

19th November
2009
 Update:  Depths of Humanity...
 
Somali woman stoned to death for adultery

Somalia flagA Somali woman was stoned to death after being found guilty of adultery in breach of Islamic law.

Halima Ibrahim Abdirahman, a 29-year-old married woman, was executed after confessing to having had sex with a 20-year-old unmarried man, Sheikh Ibrahim Sheikh Abdirahman, the judge at her trial, told spectators at the execution yesterday at Eelboon in southern Somalia.

The 20-year-old man, who was unidentified, was sentenced to 100 lashes, Sheikh Ibrahim said.

 

25th November
2009
 Update:  Stoning Parties...
 
Iranian swingers arrested and now face death by stoning

Iran flagIran's Revolutionary Guards, have struck again, arresting 12 couples for illicit sexual acts after it was found that they had been swinging.

The moral police came across Iran Multiplied, a website that features a number of couples involved in swinging, multiple partnered sex, and other acts considered illicit and illegal in the region.

Most are faculty at local universities, such as professors, and others work for the government. Many have children.

If found guilty, all 24 people face death by stoning for adultery.

 

27th November
2009
 Update:  Inhuman and Cruel...
 
The EU condemns stoning in Somalia

EU flagThe European Union (EU) has condemned the recent executions in Al Shabab, Somalia, carried out by stoning.

In a press statement, the EU said that a woman accused of adultery and a man were stoned to death in Wajid and Merka, adding that under no circumstances should such accused persons be put to death.

The EU considers stoning as inhuman and cruel, and calls on Somali authorities to abolish it and respect human rights as well as international humanitarian law.

Update: UN Expert Condemnation

30th November 2009. See article from appablog.wordpress.com

The Independent Expert on the Situation of Human Rights in Somalia, Dr. Shamsul Bari, on Friday condemned the series of stonings that have been taking place in Somalia, and called on all parties to immediately refrain from and abolish the practice of cruel, inhuman and degrading treatments, including stoning, amputations, floggings, and other unlawful acts of torture and murder.

I would like to extend my solidarity and sympathy to the Somali people in view of the deteriorating human rights situation in the country including the summary executions, floggings and stoning to death carried out in public by Islamist armed groups in South and Central Somalia, Dr. Bari said.

 

12th December
2009
 Update:  Stoning Still Law...
 
Barbarism in Indonesia still not challenged

Indonesia flagThe National Commission on Violence Against Women urged the government to review a number of sharia-based bylaws deemed discriminative against women as part of its first 100-days program.

Commission chairwoman Kamala Chandra Kirana told The Jakarta Post such bylaws violated the Constitution, and that the central government was responsible for amending them so they adhered to the Constitution.

As Indonesians, we are bound by the social contract inscribed in the Constitution, which clearly mentions non-discrimination among its main principles, Kamala said.

Special or regular *regional* autonomy should not lead to legislation that strays from the basic principles. The central government has a role to safeguard the consistency between national and regional law, she added.

By prioritizing the harmonization of local regulations with those at the national level, the new government could include the reviewing of discriminative bylaws into the program, Kamala suggested. The most dramatic of such bylaws, she said, is the Islamic criminal code bylaw passed in September by Aceh's legislative council, which introduced stoning and caning as punishment for adulterous acts.

The punishments have never appeared in national law and are actually controversial in Aceh itself. But it was still endorsed because there are many political interests involved, she said.

 

15th December
2009
 Update:  Stoning in Somalia...
 
Scourge of humanity

Somalia flagSomalia's hardline muslim group Hezb al-Islam killed two men in front of hundreds of residents in the district of Afgoye, officials and witnesses said.

Mohamed Abukar Ibrahim accused of adultery, was stoned to death by dozens of militants from the group and Ahmed Mohamoud Awale was executed by firing squad for murder.

It was the first time Hezb al-Islam had carried out such executions, usually their  the Shebab order amputations, executions and stonings in the name of Sharia law.

He was screaming, blood was coming from his head and his body, Adan Nurkey who witnessed the stoning told AFP, he died very quickly after being hit by a big stone, another witness, Mohamud Ashur said.

The 15-year-old girl with whom the man was accused of having a sexual relations received a hundred lashes, she escaped the death penalty because she was not married at the time.

 

16th January
2010
 Update:  Pits of Humanity...
 
Iranian inhumanity continues with more stoning sentences

Iran flagA court in Iran's West Azarbaijan Province has upheld the sentence of death by stoning for two Azeri Iranians, the Human Rights Activists News Agency has reported.

The two defendants, identified as Sarimeh Ebadi and Booali Janfeshani were convicted of adultery, the report said. Both are said to be currently behind bars in the northwestern city of Orumieyh.

According to the report, an appeals court upheld the sentence on 6 January.

Despite a 2002 directive by then-Judiciary chief, Ayatollah Mahmoud Hashemi-Shahroudi, imposing a moratorium on the punishment, at least five people in Iran have been stoned to death, as the directive has no legal weight and judges are free to ignore it, according to Amnesty International.

 

18th January
2010
 Update:  Barbarism in Somalia...
 
Another death by stoning

Somalia flagShabab muslim extremists in Somalia have stoned a young man to death in the southern coastal city of Barawe late on Sunday.

A regional court sentenced the Hussein Ibrahim Mohamed to be stoned to death for raping a girl mothered by his sister, according to an unidentified Islamist commander who was talking to a crowd of people as the 26 year old man was being stoned late on Sunday.

At least two hundred people in the city of Barawe gathered at open ground in the city center to watch how the execution was being carried out, but some residents say they were compelled to watch the killing.

It was not our intention to watch such very shocking incident, but we were ordered to do so and I am sorry that I have watched the killing of the young man whom I knew for more than ten years a resident who demanded anonymity said by telephone from the city.

 

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