Execution of a teenage girl

Started by Sportsdude, Jul 27 06 03:31

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Sportsdude

 [DIV class=headline]Execution of a teenage girl

[DIV class=bo]A television documentary team has pieced together details surrounding the case of a 16-year-old girl, executed two years ago in Iran.



[DIV class=bo] On 15 August, 2004, Atefah Sahaaleh was hanged in a public square in the Iranian city of Neka.  Her death sentence was imposed for "crimes against chastity".  The state-run newspaper accused her of adultery and described her as 22 years old.  But she was not married - and she was just 16.  Sharia Law In terms of the number of people executed by the state in 2004, Iran is estimated to be second only to China.  In the year of Atefah's death, at least 159 people were executed in accordance with the Islamic law of the country, based on the Sharia code.  Since the revolution, Sharia law has been Iran's highest legal authority.  Alongside murder and drug smuggling, sex outside marriage is also a capital crime.  As a signatory of the International Convention on Civil and Political Rights, Iran has promised not to execute anyone under the age of 18.  But the clerical courts do not answer to parliament. They abide by their religious supreme leader, Ayatollah Khamenei, making it virtually impossible for human rights campaigners to call them to account.  Code of behaviour At the time of Atefah's execution in Neka, journalist Asieh Amini heard rumours the girl was just 16 years old and so began to ask questions.  



[DIV class=bo] "When I met with the family," says Asieh, "they showed me a copy of her birth certificate, and a copy of her death certificate. Both of them show she was born in 1988. This gave me legitimate grounds to investigate the case."  So why was such a young girl executed? And how could she have been accused of adultery when she was not even married?  Disturbed by the death of her mother when she was only four or five years old, and her distraught father's subsequent drug addiction, Atefah had a difficult childhood.  She was also left to care for her elderly grandparents, but they are said to have shown her no affection.  In a town like Neka, heavily under the control of religious authorities, Atefah - often seen wandering around on her own - was conspicuous.  It was just a matter of time before she came to the attention of the "moral police", a branch of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard, whose job it is to enforce the Islamic code of behaviour on Iran's streets.  Secret relationship Being stopped or arrested by the moral police is a fact of life for many Iranian teenagers.  Previously arrested for attending a party and being alone in a car with a boy, Atefah received her first sentence for "crimes against chastity" when she was just 13.  Although the exact nature of the crime is unknown, she spent a short time in prison and received 100 lashes.  



[DIV class=ibox]
[TBODY]
[TD width=5][/TD] [TD class=fact][!--Smva--]Atefah was soon caught in a downward spiral of arrest and abuse
[!--Emva--][/TD][/TR][/TBODY][/TABLE]

[DIV class=bo] When she returned to her home town, she told those close to her that lashes were not the only things she had to endure in prison. She described abuse by the moral police guards.  Soon after her release, Atefah became involved in an abusive relationship with a man three times her age.  Former revolutionary guard, 51-year-old Ali Darabi - a married man with children - raped her several times.  She kept the relationship a secret from both her family and the authorities.  Atefah was soon caught in a downward spiral of arrest and abuse.  Local petition Circumstances surrounding Atefah's fourth and final arrest were unusual.  The moral police said the locals had submitted a petition, describing her as a "source of immorality" and a "terrible influence on local schoolgirls".  But there were no signatures on the petition - only those of the arresting guards.  



[DIV class=ibox]
[TBODY]
[TD width=5][/TD] [TD class=fact][!--Smva--]Men's word is accepted much more clearly and much more easily than women
[!--Emva--][!--Smva--]Mohammad Hoshi,
Iranian lawyer and exile [!--Emva--][/TD][/TR][/TBODY][/TABLE]

[DIV class=bo] Three days after her arrest, Atefah was in a court and tried under Sharia law.  The judge was the powerful Haji Rezai, head of the judiciary in Neka.  No court transcript is available from Atefah's trial, but it is known that for the first time, Atefah confessed to the secret of her sexual abuse by Ali Darabi.  However, the age of sexual consent for girls under Sharia law is nine, and furthermore, rape is very hard to prove in an Iranian court.  "Men's word is accepted much more clearly and much more easily than women," according to Iranian lawyer and exile Mohammad Hoshi.  "They can say: 'You know she encouraged me' or 'She didn't wear proper dress'."  Court of appeal



[DIV class=ibox]
[TBODY]
[TD width=5][/TD] [TD class=fact][!--So--][!--Eo--][!--Smva--]She was my love, my heart... I did everything for her, everything I could
[!--Emva--][!--Smva--]Atefah's father [!--Emva--][/TD][/TR][/TBODY][/TABLE]

[DIV class=bo] When Atefah realised her case was hopeless, she shouted back at the judge and threw off her veil in protest.  It was a fatal outburst.  She was sentenced to execution by hanging, while Darabi got just 95 lashes.  Shortly before the execution, but unbeknown to her family, documents that went to the Supreme Court of Appeal described Atefah as 22.  "Neither the judge nor even Atefah's court appointed lawyer did anything to find out her true age," says her father.  And a witness claims: "The judge just looked at her body, because of the developed physique... and declared her as 22."  Judge Haji Rezai took Atefah's documents to the Supreme Court himself.  And at six o'clock on the morning of her execution he put the noose around her neck, before she was hoisted on a crane to her death.  Pain and death During the making of the documentary about Atefah's death the production team telephoned Judge Haji Rezai to ask him about the case, but he refused to comment.  The human rights organisation Amnesty International says it is concerned that executions are becoming more common again under President Mahmoud Ahmedinajad, who advocates a return to the pure values of the revolution.  The judiciary have never admitted there was any mishandling of Atefah's case.  For Atefah's father the pain of her death remains raw. "She was my love, my heart... I did everything for her, everything I could," he says.  He did not get the chance to say goodbye.

 [img height=152 alt="Newspaper article in Farsi about Atefah's execution" hspace=0 src="http://newsimg.bbc.co.uk/media/images/41935000/jpg/_41935868_atefah_paper203.jpg" width=203 border=0]  [DIV class=cap]Atefah Sahaaleh: wrongly described as being 22 years old

[DIV class=cap]

[DIV class=cap] [img height=152 alt="Crane for hanging in silhouette" hspace=0 src="http://newsimg.bbc.co.uk/media/images/41936000/jpg/_41936178_crane_203.jpg" width=203 border=0]  [DIV class=cap]To teach others a lesson, Atefah's execution was held in public

[DIV class=cap]

[DIV class=cap] [DIV class=o][img height=152 alt="Atefah's father holding prayer beads" hspace=0 src="http://newsimg.bbc.co.uk/media/images/41936000/jpg/_41936180_father_beads203.jpg" width=203 border=0]

 [DIV class=mva][img height=13 alt="" src="http://newsimg.bbc.co.uk/nol/shared/img/v3/start_quote_rb.gif" width=24 border=0] She was my love, my heart... I did everything for her, everything I could [img height=13 alt="" src="http://newsimg.bbc.co.uk/nol/shared/img/v3/end_quote_rb.gif" width=23 align=right border=0][BR clear=all][/DIV]

[DIV class=mva] Atefah's father[/DIV][/DIV][/DIV][/DIV][/DIV]
"We can't stop here. This is bat country."

soapbox

one more reason to move into iran and intiate a regime change.along with human rights abuses of the homosexual community,meddling in the lebanese situation,fuelling the insurgency in iraq,supplying support for the taliban in afghanistan,support for the destruction of israel,support for the hamas,refusing to play ball with international nuclear standards.

  it was iran who was always the problem not iraq.

  iranian media and society does not concern itself with hezbollah or hamas,or iraq....it is the government who seeks to provoke.it is commonly said on the streets of tehran that hezbollah and hamas are arab problems not persian problems.yet despite this tehran leadership continues to move in this direction.

  a couple nukes to light up it's underground processing facilities as a starting point to warn would certianly support the western rhetoric.

Sportsdude

Stories like this make me absolutely hate capital punishment.

I cringe everytime I see the list of most executions it goes:

China

Iran

North Korea

Pakistan

Saudi Arabia

United States

  So much for trying to change the world when we end up on a list with a bunch of dictatorships.
"We can't stop here. This is bat country."

Sportsdude

U.S. executions

1,035 executed

3,370 on death row and growing

  2004 figures

  [img height=194 alt="Executions per country in 2004, according to Amnesty International" hspace=0 src="http://newsimg.bbc.co.uk/media/images/40994000/gif/_40994615_executions2_gra203.gif" width=203 border=0]

     [TABLE class=wikitable style="MARGIN: 1em; POSITION: relative" width="30%" align=right] [TBODY] [TR] [TD][/TD] [TD][/TD][/TR][/TBODY][/TABLE]
"We can't stop here. This is bat country."

Lise

Sometimes I feel religion should be land-blasted from the face of this earth.
Always end the name of your child with a vowel, so that when you yell the name will carry.
Bill Cosby.

kingy

im sure there are lots more that are not being 'reported'

  north korea must have a pretty high execution rate but nobody can get in to find out. or they can get in but they cant get out.
...