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AMNESTY
INTERNATIONAL
Public statement
(names of
co-signatories follows text)
AI Index Number: MDE
13/103/2008
Date: 29 July 2008
For Immediate Release
Iran: End
Execution of Juvenile Offenders
29 Adults and 2
Juvenile Offenders Hanged
The Iranian judiciary
should immediately halt all executions of juvenile offenders and Iran’s
parliament should move swiftly to ban such executions, a group of human rights
organizations said today.
The groups, which
include Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch and the International
Campaign for Human Rights in Iran, joined by six other international and
regional human rights organizations -- named below -- strongly condemned Iran’s
continuing execution of juvenile offenders in a joint statement.
“Iran is executing
several children every year, despite the fact that it is banned under
international law,” the organizations said. “It is cruel and inhumane to apply
the death penalty even to adults, let alone to those convicted for crimes
committed before the age of 18.”
This follows the
executions by Iranian authorities on 22 July of Hassan Mozafari and Rahman
Shahidi, both juvenile offenders, who were defined as persons under 18 at the
time of their crime.
Iranian authorities
executed Mozafari and Shahidi along with an adult offender, Hussein Rahnama, in
the southern city of Bushehr. Bushehr Criminal Court had convicted them of rape
together with another juvenile offender, Mohammad Pezhman, and two other adults
-- Behrouz Zangeneh and Ali Khorramnejad. Iranian authorities executed Pezhman
in May 2007 and the two other adults in October 2007.
Iran leads the world
in executing persons for crimes committed under the age of 18. As a party to
the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and the Convention on
the Rights of the Child, Iran is obligated to abolish such executions.
However, in 2007,
Iran carried out at least eight such executions. The recent executions of
Mozafari and Shahidi bring the number of juvenile executions to four so far in
2008. No other country is known to have executed a juvenile offender in 2008.
The situation of
juvenile offenders facing execution in Iran has reached crisis levels, making
Iran’s violation of international standards much greater than any other
country. There are at least 132 juvenile offenders known to be on death row in
Iran, although the true number could be much higher.
Following intense
international protests, two juvenile offenders facing execution for murder,
Sa’eed Jazee and Reza Sheshblooki, were spared the death penalty last week
after receiving pardons from the families of their victims.
On 8 July, 24 major
international and regional organizations called on the Iranian authorities
immediately to stop juvenile executions. In December 2007, the UN General
Assembly expressed concern about the “execution of persons who were under the
age of 18 at the time their offence was committed contrary to the obligations
of the Islamic Republic of Iran under article 37 of the Convention on the
Rights of the Child and article 6 of the International Covenant on Civil and
Political Rights.”
“Iran’s insistence on
executing juvenile offenders in the face of international law and international
protests portrays an image of a judicial system bent on the application of
state violence against juvenile offenders , but unconcerned about justice or international
law,” the organizations said.
The organizations
calling on Iran to end juvenile executions are: Amnesty International; Human
Rights Watch; International Campaign for Human Rights in Iran; Iran Human
Rights; Iranian League for the Defense of Human Rights (LDDHI); Penal Reform
International; Human Rights Association; Stop Child Executions and Vivere.
On 27 July, the
Iranian authorities hanged 29 adults inside Evin prison in Tehran. The
authorities said the executed men had been convicted of drug smuggling and
murder, but provided names for only ten of them and did not release the
evidence against them or details of their prosecution. The United Nations
General Assembly adopted resolution 62/149 on 18 December 2007 in which it
called on states to establish a moratorium on executions with a view to
abolishing the death penalty, but Iran continues to fly in the face of this
global trend towards abolition. Iran has executed 191 people already in 2008,
making it likely to maintain its position as carrying out more executions than
any country in the world but China, although its population is 18 times smaller
than China’s.
“Sending almost 30
people to their death by hanging in a single day invokes a grotesque image of
Iranian judges,” the organizations said. “It is abhorrent that there is no
information about those executed and it raises serious concerns about due
process and the rule of law.”
END/
For more
information, please contact:
International
Campaign For Human Rights in Iran
Hadi Ghaemi,
Coordinator
+1 917 669 5996
Email:
hadighaemi@iranhumanrights.org
Human
Rights Watch
Clarisa Bencomo,
Children’s Rights Researcher for the Middle East and North Africa
+2010 970 9911 (mobile);
Email: bencomc@hrw.org
Amnesty International
Judith
Higgin
Press
Officer
+44
207 413 5810 (direct line)
Email:judith.higgin@amnesty.org
Stop
Child Executions
David
Etebari, Vice President
+1 310 598 3616
Email:
detebari@gmail.com
www.stopchildexecutions.com
Tahar
Boumedra
Penal
Reform International
Regional
Director for MENA
Sweifieh
Post Office
PO
Box 852122
11185 Amman, Jordan
Tel. (00 962 6)5826017
Tel/Fax. (00 962 6)5826078
Mobile.(00 962) 0799946651
E-mail: tboumedra@penalreform.org
v
i v e r e
protecting
people whose lives are endangered by unacceptable discrimination
Mike
Hoffman, President
7
av. d'Yverdon C.H.1004
Lausanne,
Switzerland
www.vivere.ch
contact@vivere.ch
CCP
17 – 709 738 – 6
Karim
Lahidji, President
Iranian league for
the defense of human rights (LDDHI)
lddhi@wanadoo.fr
Osman Isci
International Affairs Consultant
Human
Rights Association (IHD)
+903124259547
Email: ihd@tr-net.net.tr
Iran Human Rights
Mahmood Amiry-Moghaddam
Spokesperson
+47 91742177
Email: iranhr2007@gmail.com
Public Document
****************************************
For more information
please call Amnesty International's press office in London, UK, on +44 20 7413
5566 or email: press@amnesty.org
International
Secretariat, Amnesty International, 1 Easton St., London WC1X 0DW, UK
www.amnesty.org
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