|
Home | News | Archive| RSS
twitter | facebook
|
| Payvand Iran News ... |
|
|
12/07/07
|
|
|
|
|
Iran: Execution of child offender Makwan Moloudazdeh is a mockery of justice
|
|
Amnesty
International Public Statement
Amnesty International
condemns the execution, on 4 December 2007, of Makwan Moloudzadeh, an Iranian
Kurdish child offender, following a grossly flawed trial for an offence he
allegedly committed at the age of 13. Execution for a crime committed at the age
of 13 is a gross abuse of international human rights standards, which prohibit
the execution of those convicted of crimes committed under the age of 18.
In 2007 alone, the
Iranian authorities have executed at least five other child offenders and at
least 75 others remain on death row.
Makwan Moloudzadeh,
21, was convicted of lavat-e iqabi (anal sex) for the alleged rape of
three individuals, eight years ago, when he was 13.
Under Article 49 of
the Penal Code, minors - those who have not yet reached maturity (puberty) as
defined by Islamic Law - are exempted from criminal responsibility. Under
Article 1210 of the Civil Code, boys are deemed to reach puberty at the age of
15 lunar years (approximately 14 years and seven months), but this appears to
leave open the possibility that judges may rule on a different age of maturity
in individual cases. Article 113 of the Penal Code provides for up to 74 lashes
in the case of a minor convicted of anal sex.
Makwan Moloudzadeh's
trial was grossly flawed. The alleged victims withdrew their accusations in the
course of the trial, held in a criminal court in Kermanshah and with sessions
held in Paveh, western Iran, in July 2007, and reportedly stated that they had
either lied previously or had been forced to "confess." In sentencing Makwan
Moloudzadeh to death, the judge relied on his 'knowledge' that Makwan
Moloudzadeh could be tried as an adult and that the alleged offence had been
committed, as is allowed by Iranian law.
According to Article
120 of the Penal Code, in cases of anal sex between men, the judge "can make his
judgement according to his knowledge which is obtained through conventional
methods."
The trial judge
sentenced Makwan Moloudzadeh to death in July 2007 when Makwan Moloudzadeh was
aged 21, even though Makwan Moloudzadeh was under 15 lunar years at the time of
the alleged crime, and in the absence of medical evidence testifying to his
state of maturity at the time of the crime.
Iran is a state party
to both the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and the
Convention on the Rights of the Child, both of which require that the
authorities do not execute child offenders - those under 18 at the time of their
alleged offence. The Committee on the Rights of the Child, the independent body
that examines states' implementation of the Convention on the Rights of the
Child, has expressed concern about the process of determination by judges of the
criminal responsibility of child offenders due to the weight the judges attach
to subjective and arbitrary criteria, such as the attainment of puberty, the age
of discernment or the personality of the child.
Amnesty International
is calling on the Head of Judiciary in Iran, Ayatollah Shahroudi, urgently to
review the methods used by judicial officials in this case, which resulted in
the death sentence and execution of Makwan Moloudzadeh. The Iranian authorities
must uphold Iran's commitment to the international community not to execute
child offenders.
Background
Makwan Moloudzadeh
was arrested on 1 October 2006 in Paveh, western Iran. In July 2007 he was tried
and sentenced to death by a criminal court in Kermanshah. During his trial,
Makwan Moloudzadeh is said to have maintained his innocence. Previously, he
alleged that while detained by security officials he was ill-treated during
interrogation and "confessed" that he had had a sexual relationship with a boy
in 1999. No investigation of his allegations of ill-treatment, or of those made
by the witnesses against him who alleged that they had been required to provide
false testimony, is known to have been investigated by the trial court or other
Iranian authorities. The Supreme Court rejected Makwan Moloudzadeh's appeal on
or around 1 August. The Head of the Judiciary apparently approved the sentence,
and between August and October the case was submitted to the Office for the
Implementation of Sentences.
In November Makwan
Moloudzadeh's lawyer sought a judicial enquiry to allow a review of the verdict
and sentence. On 14 November a temporary stay of execution was ordered to allow
for reinvestigation of the case. However, this review appears to have found no
fault with the verdict and sentence and Makwan Moloudzadeh was executed on 4
December.
At least 75 child
offenders are on death row in Iran; Amnesty International fears that an
additional15 child offenders, all Afghan nationals convicted of drug smuggling
offences committed when they were under 18 may also be facing possible death
sentences or have been already sentenced to death.
For more information
about Amnesty International's concerns regarding executions of child offenders
in Iran, please see: Iran: The last executioner of children (MDE 13/059/2007,
June 2007)
http://web.amnesty.org/library/index/engmde130592007
Flogging is cruel,
inhuman and degrading punishment which amounts to torture.
Reports suggest that
the military presence in the town of Paveh has been increased in anticipation of
protests by local inhabitants.
... Payvand News - 12/07/07 ... --
|
© Copyright 2007 NetNative
(All Rights Reserved) |
|
Join Payvand's Facebook Page
|