Source: Human Rights
Watch
Legislature Should Follow With Legal
Ban
(New York, October 17, 2008) - A recent judicial
ban on juvenile executions in Iran should save more than 130 juvenile offenders
currently on death row from execution, Human Rights Watch said today. An Iranian
Judiciary official announced on October 15, 2008 that death sentences for
offenders under the age of 18 would be commuted to life imprisonment with the
possibility of parole. Human Rights Watch said Iranian law should be changed to
ensure the ban is enforced.
Since January 2005, Iran has been responsible for
26 of the 32 known executions of juvenile offenders worldwide. International law
prohibits all executions of persons who were under the age of 18 at the time
they committed their crimes, and pressure is growing on Iran and the four other
states known to execute juvenile offenders to conform with international law. On
October 14, more than 300 nongovernmental organizations from 82 countries called
on the United Nations to take urgent action to end juvenile executions (http://www.hrw.org/english/docs/2008/10/14/iran19965.htm
).
"If Iran enacts this judicial ban it will bring
the world much closer to ending all executions for crimes committed by
children," said Clarisa Bencomo, Middle East children's rights researcher at
Human Rights Watch. "The Iranian legislature should move quickly to protect
juveniles in Iran by making the policy legally binding."
On October 15, Iran's official Islamic Republic
News Agency (IRNA) quoted Hussein Zebhi, deputy for judicial affairs to Iran's
Prosecutor General, as saying the Judiciary had issued a directive commuting
death sentences for juvenile offenders: "According to this directive,
punishments for offenders under the age of 18 [in capital offence cases], will
be reduced to life in prison in the first stage and in the second stage [of
parole] will be reduced to 15 years in prison. In addition, in cases of good
behavior and signs of rehabilitation, juvenile offenders may qualify for
conditional release under Islamic compassion guidelines."
Zebhi told the news agency that the directive
would apply to all offenders under the age of 18, regardless of their offenses.
However, in the past Iranian officials justified some executions of juvenile
offenders by saying they were over 18 at the time of execution, or by arguing
that executions in murder cases were not executions, but rather enforcement of
the murder victim's heirs' private right to retribution (qisas).
A similar directive issued in 2004 also banned
executions of persons under 18, but has not stopped judges from issuing death
sentences against juvenile offenders, and in some cases carrying out executions
of persons still under 18 at the time of execution. Six juvenile offenders have
been executed in Iran in 2008 alone.
Human Rights Watch said that until Iranian
lawmakers pass legislation to ban all juvenile executions, judicial authorities
should discipline officials who order or carry out executions of juvenile
offenders in violation of the directive.
Human Rights Watch opposes capital punishment in
all circumstances because of its cruel and inhumane nature. In particular, in
imposing death sentences on people for crimes committed before the age of 18,
Iran flouts clear and specific human rights obligations. The imposition of the
death penalty for such offenses is prohibited under two key human rights
treaties that Iran has ratified: the International Covenant on Civil and
Political Rights, and the Convention on the Rights of the Child.
To read the petition by 305 groups in Arabic,
English, Farsi, French, Japanese or Spanish, please see:
http://www.crin.org/petitions/petition.asp?petID=1012
To read the September 2008 Human Rights Watch
report, "The Last Holdouts: Ending the Juvenile Death Penalty in Iran, Saudi
Arabia, Sudan, Pakistan, and Yemen," please visit:
http://www.hrw.org/reports/2008/crd0908/index.htm
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