16 January 2014, Amnesty International,
Iran has carried out a total of 40 executions since the beginning of
2014, with at least 33 carried out in the past week alone, said Amnesty
International today.
The death penalty is a violation of every human being’s right to life and is a cruel, inhuman and degrading punishment.
“The
Iranian authorities must urgently take steps to abolish the death
penalty, which has been shown again and again not to have any special
deterrent effect on crime,” Hassiba Hadj Sahraoui said.
Since
the beginning of 2014, Amnesty International has recorded 21 executions
which were officially acknowledged by the Iranian authorities, as well
as 19 additional executions reported through reliable sources.
In
the week since 9 January 2014 more officially acknowledged executions
were carried out in Iran than during the whole month of January 2013.
At
least one public execution was carried out on 13 January 2014 in
Sirjan, Kerman Province, southern Iran, of an individual convicted of
murder.
Public executions in Iran are usually carried out using
cranes which lift the condemned person by a noose around the neck in
front of a crowd of spectators.
The organization is calling on
the Iranian authorities to immediately adopt an official moratorium on
all executions and commute all death sentences. The Iranian authorities
must also end all secrecy surrounding their use of the death penalty.
Most
of those executed in Iran had been convicted of alleged drug-related
offences. Under international standards, non-lethal crimes such as drugs
offences do not meet the threshold of “most serious crimes” to which
the death penalty must be restricted. There is also no right to a
meaningful appeal for drugs offences under Iran’s Anti-Narcotics Law,
contrary to its international obligations to ensure that anyone
convicted of a criminal offence has the right to appeal the conviction.
“In
Iran drug-related offences are tried in Revolutionary Courts which
routinely fall far short of international fair trial standards. The
reality in Iran is that people are being ruthlessly sentenced to death
after unfair trials, and this is unacceptable,” said Hassiba Hadj
Sahraoui.
Revolutionary Court trials are frequently held behind
closed doors and judges have the discretion to restrict lawyers’ access
to the defendant during pre-trial investigations in limited cases.
Amnesty International opposes the death penalty in all cases without exception.
http://www.amnesty.org/en/news/iran-hangs-40-people-two-weeks-amid-surge-executions-2014-01-16
Thursday, January 16, 2014
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