EXECUTION IN IRAN
Although officially outlawed since 1981, human rights groups claim a number of people are still being stoned to death in Iran.
This
is likely due to the murky nature of Iran's Sharia-based legal system
where judges are only given vague punishment guidelines.
This
includes ordering judges to simply to execute individuals according to
"valid Islamic sources", without specifying the approved methods.
While
Iran denies the stonings are taking place, human rights groups say
victims are wrapped in cloth and made to stand in a hole in the ground
while stones are thrown at them.
The total number of executions carried out in Iran stands only next to China, whose population is over 17 folds greater.
Iran Human Rights Monitor says many spend years lingering on death row where they are horribly tortured.
This
is said to include stripping prisoners and pouring boiling water on
them, pushing needles into their genitals, ripping out finger nails and
hanging them by their feet.
According to
Amnesty, at least nine people died in custody under suspicious
circumstances following their arrests in connection with the protests in
late 2017 and early 2018.
Officials claimed some had committed suicide, claims which were disputed by their families.
Worryingly
in 2018 the lawyer Mohammad Najafi was arrested, sentenced to 14 years
in prison and given 74 lashes on charges including “disturbing public
order” after revealing some of the victims' bodies showed evidence of
torture.
Amnestry International told the Sun
Online: “For years, Iranian authorities have continued to display a
gruesome commitment to the use of the death penalty.
The
death penalty is a cruel, inhuman and degrading punishment and Amnesty
International considers its use horrendous in all circumstances.
"The Iranian authorities must impose an immediate moratorium on the death penalty with a view to abolishing it completely.”
A
Human Right’s Watch spokeswomen added: "We have long called Iran to
place a moratorium on executions, starting with executions of
individuals who are sentenced to death for offences they committed as
children."
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