What's new

Iran’s ‘staggering’ execution spree: nearly 700 put to death in just over six months

Saif al-Arab

BANNED
Joined
Mar 26, 2015
Messages
8,873
Reaction score
5
Country
Saudi Arabia
Location
Spain
Iran’s ‘staggering’ execution spree: nearly 700 put to death in just over six months

23 July 2015, 00:01 UTC

The Iranian authorities are believed to have executed an astonishing 694 people between 1 January and 15 July 2015, said Amnesty International today, in an unprecedented spike in executions in the country.

This is equivalent to executing more than three people per day. At this shocking pace, Iran is set to surpass the total number of executions in the country recorded by Amnesty International for the whole of last year.

“Iran’s staggering execution toll for the first half of this year paints a sinister picture of the machinery of the state carrying out premeditated, judicially-sanctioned killings on a mass scale,” said Said Boumedouha, Deputy Director of Amnesty International’s Middle East and North Africa Programme.


“If Iran’s authorities maintain this horrifying execution rate we are likely to see more than 1,000 state-sanctioned deaths by the year’s end.”

The surge in executions reveals just how out of step Iran is with the rest of the world when it comes to the use of the death penalty - 140 countries worldwide have now rejected its use in law or practice. Already this year three more countries have repealed the death penalty completely.
Executions in Iran did not even stop during the holy month of Ramadan. In a departure from established practice, at least four people were executed over the past month.

While Amnesty International opposes the use of the death penalty unconditionally and in all cases, death sentences in Iran are particularly disturbing because they are invariably imposed by courts that are completely lacking in independence and impartiality. They are imposed either for vaguely worded or overly broad offences, or acts that should not be criminalized at all, let alone attract the death penalty. Trials in Iran are deeply flawed, detainees are often denied access to lawyers in the investigative stage, and there are inadequate procedures for appeal, pardon and commutation.

“The Iranian authorities should be ashamed of executing hundreds of people with complete disregard for the basic safeguards of due process,” said Said Boumedouha.

“The use of the death penalty is always abhorrent, but it raises additional concerns in a country like Iran where trials are blatantly unfair.”

The reasons behind this year’s shocking surge in executions are unclear but the majority of those put to death in 2015 were convicted on drug charges.

Iran’s Anti-Narcotics Law provides mandatory death sentences for a range of drug-related offences, including trafficking more than 5kg of narcotics derived from opium or more than 30g of heroin, morphine, cocaine or their chemical derivatives.

This is in direct breach of international law, which restricts the use of the death penalty to only the “most serious crimes” – those involving intentional killing. Drug-related offences do not meet this threshold.

There is also no evidence to prove that the death penalty is a deterrent to crime and drug trafficking or use. Earlier this year, the deputy of Iran’s Centre for Strategic Research admitted that the death penalty has not been able to reduce drug trafficking levels.

“For years, Iranian authorities have used the death penalty to spread a climate of fear in a misguided effort to combat drug trafficking, yet there is not a shred of evidence to show that this is an effective method of tackling crime,” said Said Boumedouha.

Many of those convicted of drug-related offences come from disadvantaged backgrounds. Their cases are rarely publicized. In a letter circulated online in June, 54 prisoners held on death row in Ghezel Hesar prison near Tehran described their plight:

“We are the victims of a state of hunger, poverty and misery, hurled down into the hollows of perdition by force and without our will… If we had jobs, if we did not need help, if we could turn our lives around and stop our children from going hungry, why should we have gone down a path that guaranteed us our death?”

Among those executed in Iran are also members of ethnic and religious minorities convicted of “enmity against God” and “corruption on earth” including Kurdish political prisoners and Sunni Muslims.

Currently, based on monitoring work done by Amnesty International and other human rights organizations, several thousand people are believed to be on death row in Iran. The Iranian authorities have said that 80% of those awaiting execution are convicted of drug-related offences. They have not, however, provided an exact number.

“It is especially harrowing that there is no end in sight for this theatre of cruelty with Iran’s gallows awaiting thousands more death row prisoners,” said Said Boumedouha.

Prisoners in Iran are often left languishing on death row, wondering each day if it will be their last. In many cases they are notified of their execution only a few hours beforehand and in some cases, families learn about the fate of their loved ones days, if not weeks, later.

Background

Each year the Iranian authorities acknowledge a certain number of judicial executions. However, many more judicial executions are carried out but not acknowledged.

As of 15 July 2015, the Iranian authorities had officially acknowledged 246 executions this year but Amnesty International has received credible reports of a further 448 executions carried out in this time period. In 2014, 289 people were executed according to official sources but credible reports suggested that the real figure was at least 743.

Each year Amnesty International reports both the number of officially acknowledged executions in Iran and the number of executions the organization has been able to confirm took place, but which were not officially acknowledged. When calculating the annual global total number of executions Amnesty International has, to date, only counted executions officially acknowledged by the Iranian authorities.

The organization has reviewed this approach and believes it fails to fully reflect the scale of executions in Iran, about which the authorities must be transparent. In its 2015 annual report on the death penalty, and all other reporting on the death penalty in Iran, Amnesty International will use the combined figure of officially acknowledged executions and those executions not officially admitted but which the organization has confirmed took place.

Iran’s ‘staggering’ execution spree: nearly 700 put to death in just over six months | Amnesty International

Shocking news. Only 1.3 billion big China has executed more people so far this year in the entire world. Notice that this article was written in late July. Almost 3 months ago. The number must have reached 1000 by now!
 
.
Every time I see you have made a thread about Iran, I'm 100% sure someone has hurt your feelings in another thread in an argument. This is your 'Ultimate Weapon', after your 10000 letter posts of repeating the same nonsense don't work anymore.

Please change your tactics. :disagree: :enjoy:
 
.
Iran: Kurdish man executed while awaiting appeal of his death sentence
26 August 2015, 14:07 UTC

Behrouz Alkhani, a 30-year-old man from Iran’s Kurdish minority, was executed early this morning local time, said Amnesty International, despite the fact that he was awaiting the outcome of a Supreme Court appeal.

The organization has also learned that the authorities have so far refused to return Behrouz Alkhani’s body to his family.

“Today's execution of Behrouz Alkhani, who was still waiting for the outcome of a Supreme Court appeal against his sentence, is a vicious act of cruelty by the Iranian authorities and a denigration of both Iranian and international law. It is appalling that they have imposed further pain and suffering on Behrouz Alkhani’s family by refusing to return his body for burial," said Said Boumedouha, Deputy Director of Amnesty International’s Middle East and North Africa Programme.

“The fact that the authorities have carried out the execution despite the pending appeal against a sentence imposed in a grossly unfair trial and international pleas to halt the execution, shows their utter disregard for justice. His execution is just further proof of the authorities' determined resolve to continue with a relentless wave of executions which has seen more than 700 put to death in Iran so far this year."

For more information about the case see: Iran: Halt execution of Kurdish man due to be carried out tomorrow morning | Amnesty International

Iran: Kurdish man executed while awaiting appeal of his death sentence | Amnesty International

Iran: Schoolteacher due to be executed at dawn
7 September 2015, 19:19 UTC

The Iranian authorities must immediately halt the execution of Mahmoud Barati, a teacher who was convicted of drug-related offences following an unfair trial that is believed to have included a confession obtained through torture and other ill-treatment, Amnesty International said.

According to contacts in Ghezel Hesar prison, Mahmoud Barati has been transferred to solitary confinement and is scheduled to be executed at dawn tomorrow morning (8 September 2015).

“Mahmoud Barati’s execution must immediately be halted. International law does not allow for the use of death penalty for drug-related offences. The Iranian authorities must immediately quash his death sentence,” said Audrey Gaughran, Director of Global Issues at Amnesty International.

“The Iranian authorities must end their unprecedented killing spree – more than 700 people have been executed so far this year, most of them convicted on drug-related charges.”

According to a contact in Ghezel Hesar prison, following his arrest 10 years ago, Mahmoud Barati was held in a detention centre of the Office to Combat Drug Offences for 10 days where he was allegedly subjected to torture and other ill-treatment to “confess”. He subsequently made statements to both the prosecutor and the court retracting these “confessions”.

mahmoud-barati.jpg

Mahmoud Barati © Private
The prison contact also raised concerns that the principal witness against Mahmoud Barati may have retracted his testimony.

Iran’s Anti-Narcotics Law provides mandatory death sentences for a range of drug-related offences, including trafficking more than 5kg of narcotics derived from opium or more than 30g of heroin, morphine, cocaine or their chemical derivatives.

This is in direct breach of international law, which restricts the use of the death penalty to only the “most serious crimes” – those involving intentional killing. Drug-related offences do not meet this threshold.

There is also no evidence to prove that the death penalty is a particular deterrent to crime and drug trafficking or use. Earlier this year, the deputy of Iran’s Centre for Strategic Research admitted that the death penalty has not been able to reduce drug trafficking levels.

Iran: Schoolteacher due to be executed at dawn | Amnesty International
 
.
lots of them wahabbis from the southwest who preach anti-establishment bull***
Name calling never helps. Best to counter anyone, is with facts. Hope you understand.

Every time I see you have made a thread about Iran, I'm 100% sure someone has hurt your feelings in another thread in an argument. This is your 'Ultimate Weapon', after your 10000 letter posts of repeating the same nonsense don't work anymore.

Please change your tactics. :disagree: :enjoy:

Instead of getting personal, why don't you talk about the postive side i.e drug dealers, murderers and rapists deserve more. Capital punishment is too less.

Best Regards & have a good evening:cheers:
 
.
700 is a huge number in 6 months! death penalty should be abolished as there have been cases where innocent men were killed and later found not guilty but they paid the ultimate price.
 
.
Every time I see you have made a thread about Iran, I'm 100% sure someone has hurt your feelings in another thread in an argument. This is your 'Ultimate Weapon', after your 10000 letter posts of repeating the same nonsense don't work anymore.

Please change your tactics. :disagree: :enjoy:

If Iranians of all people who hardly live in Denmark, Norway, Sweden, Netherlands etc. (you get the point) can make hypocritical threads about KSA, UAE, Egypt or whatever states that they don't like due to regime policies or whatever reasons then surely Arabs are entitled to make threads about Iran that point out the hypocrisy.

Especially as Iran is much worse than any Arab nation on this front. It's not even close. Those are not my words but those of Amnesty International and statistics confirm it.

If I wanted to put Iran in a bad spotlight I could post several such threads each weak as there is plenty of such bad publicity. There is no need to state the obvious though not that the MENA region is famed for its righteous regimes to begin with but I only see Iranians here parroting that their regime is much better than others in the region which is an outright lie and it cannot be taken seriously.

I don't see any Arab users doing that whether it's Saudi Arabians or Egyptians for instance.

I am personally pro-death penalty for hardcore criminals provided that the trials are conducted in a fair fashion but hypocrisy should be combated.
 
.
Name calling never helps. Best to counter anyone, is with facts. Hope you understand.

Haven't you noticed , i'm trying to blend in with the rest of the iranian community on this forum , they call me an afghani because i use the more straightforward term arab , instead of wahhabi and such ..
 
.
Haven't you noticed , i'm trying to blend in with the rest of the iranian community on this forum , they call me an afghani because i use the more straightforward term arab , instead of wahhabi and such ..

You are contradicting yourself

lots of them wahabbis from the southwest who preach anti-establishment bull***
 
.
.
Amnesia international is headed by Ahmed Shahid احمر شهید , a Shia' arab whom even the iranian authorities mock because of his background exploit

Ahmed Shaheed - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Are you joking? That guy is from the Maldives.

Ahmed Shaheed - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Does he look like an Arab to you?



Anyway it does not matter. He could be a Martian and believe in the Spaghetti God. Facts are facts. Exposing hypocrisy is exposing hypocrisy.
 
.
Instead of getting personal, why don't you talk about the postive side i.e drug dealers, murderers and rapists deserve more. Capital punishment is too less.
I think you can read below the reason behind this thread, not that anyone here sheds a tear for drug dealers or rapists and murderers.

I'm not saying every death sentence in Iran is justified, but I can safely say, +95% of them are, and piss activists, Amnesty international and other boot lickers can really go screw themselves, they are the biggest hypocrites around.
If Iranians of all people who hardly live in Denmark, Norway, Sweden, Netherlands etc. (you get the point) can make hypocritical threads about KSA, UAE, Egypt or whatever states that they don't like due to regime policies or whatever reasons then surely Arabs are entitled to make threads about Iran that point out the hypocrisy.

Especially as Iran is much worse than any Arab nation on this front. It's not even close. Those are not my words but those of Amnesty International and statistics confirm it.

If I wanted to put Iran in a bad spotlight I could post several such threads each weak as there is plenty of such bad publicity. There is no need to state the obvious though not that the MENA region is famed for its righteous regimes to begin with but I only see Iranians here parroting that their regime is much better than others in the region which is an outright lie and it cannot be taken seriously.

Yes you can, no one denies you that right.

You can donate some money to families of all those drug dealers or rapists who are executed, since you seem to feel so much for them. Creating a thread on the forum is not going to solve the problem, you should act. Don't let the money go to waste.
 
.
I think you can read below the reason behind this thread, not that anyone here sheds a tear for drug dealers or rapists and murderers.

I'm not saying every death sentence in Iran is justified, but I can safely say, +95% of them are, and piss activists, Amnesty international and other boot lickers can really go screw themselves, they are the biggest hypocrites around.


Yes you can, no one denies you that right.

You can donate some money to families of all those drug dealers or rapists who are executed, since you seem to feel so much for them. Creating a thread on the forum is not going to solve the problem, you should act. Don't let the money go to waste.

Then you and your compatriots should not be crying when KSA or Egypt for instance are executing murderers, terrorists, drug dealers (regardless of their nationality and sect) on a much smaller scale but unfortunately this is the case again and again.
 
.
I think you can read below the reason behind this thread, not that anyone here sheds a tear for drug dealers or rapists and murderers.

I'm not saying every death sentence in Iran is justified, but I can safely say, +95% of them are, and piss activists, Amnesty international and other boot lickers can really go screw themselves, they are the biggest hypocrites around.

.

See this is where I agree with Iran, forget if it's 700, even if it's a thousand, it's fine, as long as the got their due process and the deserve it. What anyone says shouldn't matter. Irrespective of why the thread was opened, you should look at the +ve side. People who live in the Middle East know, that the only way to sort out some crimes is by handing out capital punishment. Nothing less.
 
.
Then you and your compatriots should not be crying when KSA or Egypt for instance is executing murderers, terrorists, drug dealers (regardless of their nationality and sect) on a much smaller scale but unfortunately this is the case again and again.

I don't give a crap really how many KSA executes, it becomes a problem when you fund, arm and send thousands of nutbags in other countries in the name of 'democracy', which is the irony.

If you keep the poison and virus inside your country, no one really cares what you do inside.

See this is where I agree with Iran, forget if it's 700, even if it's a thousand, it's fine, as long as the got their due process and the deserve it. What anyone says shouldn't matter. Irrespective of why the thread was opened, you should look at the +ve side. People who live in the Middle East know, that the only way to sort out some crimes is by handing out capital punishment. Nothing less.

As a side not for others who don't know, more than 75% of executions in Iran are related to drug traffickers. No one is certainly happy seeing executions, but piss activists, Europe and U.S can always receive those cretins and keep them in their country. But what they do is just sitting there and barking, crying about 'human right' violations.
 
.
I don't give a crap really how many KSA executes, it becomes a problem when you fund, arm and send thousands of nutbags in other countries in the name of 'democracy', which is the irony.

If you keep the poison and virus inside your country, no one really cares what you do inside.

But a whole lot of your compatriots (let alone your PissTV and Farse News) do evident of PDF and other forums and media.

As many if not even more people (most of the 450 million Arabs to start with) can say exactly the same about your nut bags and viruses that have been plaguing the MENA region since 1979 while it was largely peaceful before that.
 
.

Pakistan Defence Latest Posts

Pakistan Affairs Latest Posts

Back
Top Bottom