AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL
Public Statement
AI Index: MDE
13/110/2007 (Public)
News Service No:
171
5 September 2007
Iran:
Amnesty International appalled at the spiralling numbers of executions
Amnesty International is appalled at
the reports of the execution of 21 people in Iran this morning, bringing
the total number of executions recorded by the organization since the start
of 2007 to 210.
This figure exceeds the 177 executions
recorded in 2006, although the true figure for both years is likely to
be higher. At least two child offenders were among those executed to date
in 2007.
Amnesty International has catalogued
scores of unfair trials in recent years and the organisation is concerned
that many of those executed today faced unfair trials, and a failure to
ensure that fair trial safeguards in death penalty cases are implemented
in all cases without exemption or discrimination.
Under Iranian law, the accused has no
right to legal representation prior to being formally charged. The UN Special
Rapporteur on extrajudicial, summary or arbitrary executions has stated
that all defendants facing the imposition of capital punishment must benefit
from the services of a competent defence counsel at every stage of the
proceedings
The scope of capital crimes in Iran
remains extraordinarily large and includes vaguely worded charges, such
as "enmity against God" (moharebeh ba Khoda) "being
corrupt on earth" (mofsed fil arz), which refer, inter alia,
to those accused of using firearms against the state; carrying out acts
of robbery and to those who are considered to be carrying out espionage
against the government. These crimes, including those of are adultery by
married people, and same-sex sexual conduct, regarded as a crime against
God and as such are not subject to pardon. Discretionary laws over which
judges have the power to impose the death penalty include those relating
to national security offences.
Article 6(2) of the International Covenant
on Civil and Political Rights, to which Iran is a state party states: "In
countries which have not abolished the death penalty, sentence of death
may be imposed only for the most serious crimes..." The UN Human Rights
Committee, the independent body that reviews states' implementation of
this treaty has stated: "The Committee is of the opinion that the
expression 'most serious crimes' must be read restrictively to mean that
the death penalty should be a quite exceptional measure." Furthermore,
Safeguard 1 of the Safeguards Guaranteeing Protection of the Rights of
Those Facing the Death Penalty, adopted by the UN Economic and Social Council
in 1984, states: "In countries which have not abolished the death
penalty, capital punishment may be imposed only for the most serious crimes,
it being understood that their scope should not go beyond intentional crimes,
with lethal or other extremely grave consequences."
At least four of the executions today,
in Shiraz, were carried out in public, although the UN Human Rights Committee
has stated: "Public executions are... incompatible with human dignity."
At least two of those executed in Shiraz appeared to have belonged to Iran's
Baluchi minority. Amnesty International is concerned that members of Iran's
Baluchi minority have formed a significant proportion of those executed
in Iran.
Amnesty International continues to urge
the Iranian authorities to stop executing child offenders; to implement
all required safeguards in capital cases and to limit the scope of crimes
punishable by death, as a first step towards its total abolition. The organisation
is calling for an immediate moratorium on executions in Iran. The UN General
Assembly's (UNGA) 62nd session in October 2007 will vote on a resolution
calling for a global moratorium on executions, to be introduced as a step
towards the abolition of the death penalty. Amnesty International calls
on Iran to halt the continuing use of this most extreme penalty, which
is a gross violation of human rights and to back this resolution.
The organisation also calls on the people
of Iran to support the campaign entitled "Stop the Death Penalty:
The World Decides," initiated by World Coalition against the Death
Penalty (WCADP) and other non-governmental organizations by signing an
online petition found at: http://www.worldcoalition.org/modules/news/article.php?storyid=10&sel_lang=english
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