JSalloum on Wed, 15 Sep 1999 06:09:11 EDT |
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Syndicate: Iran: Death Sentences |
>> IRAN: REVOLUTIONARY COURT >> DEATH SENTENCES CONDEMNED >> >> (New York, September 14, 1999) -- The head of Tehran's revolutionary >> Court has announced that four as yet unnamed people have been >> sentenced to death in relation to student demonstrations there last >> month. Human Rights Watch today called for the retrial of the four in a >> >> public court and with full access to the procedural safeguards set out >> in international law. It said trials before the Revolutionary Courts do >> >> not conform with international standards for fair trial. >> >> The head of Tehran's Revolutionary Court stated on September 11 that >> four unnamed individuals had been sentenced to death in connection with >> pro-democracy protests by Tehran University students in July. In an >> interview with the conservative daily newspaper Jomhouri-Eslami, >> Hojatoleslam Gholamhossein Rahbarpour said two of the sentences had been >> >> confirmed by the Supreme Court. He also held out the possibility of >> further death sentences among the "thousand arrested" during the >> protests. >> >> "There are other dossiers with heavy punishments under investigation," >> he said. Speaking about another case involving several members of the >> Jewish community arrested on charges of spying for Israel, Judge >> Rahbarpour said that "the courts had evidence that proved their guilt." >> >> "The real motive in sentencing these four people to death is apparently >> to punish them for exercising their rights, to set an example and >> intimidate Iranian students as they return to classes," said Hanny >> Megally, the executive director of the Middle East and North Africa >> Division. In addition he noted that procedures in the Revolutionary >> Courts fall far >> short of international standards for a fair trial with defendants being >> denied access to legal counsel and held indefinitely incommunicado in >> pre-trial detention. >> >> Human Rights Watch said that the evidentiary basis for the detention of >> those arrested following demonstrations in Tehran and Tabriz, and for >> the detention of the thirteen Iranian Jews held since March 1999, has >> never been made public. >> >> >> >> "We are very concerned that the thirteen members of the Jewish minority >> may have been singled out for persecution as a gambit in what is thought >> >> to be a struggle within Iran's leadership," said Megally. >> >> Human Rights Watch called for the judicial authorities to immediately >> release those against whom no evidence of involvement in criminal >> activities existed. Others, against whom there is evidence of criminal >> conduct, should be given fair, public trials with full access to the >> procedural safeguards required in international law. This should >> include the right to communicate with legal counsel of their own choice. >> >> Human Rights Watch requested permission to send international observers >> to attend any forthcoming trials in connection with the above cases. >> >> =================================================== > ------Syndicate mailinglist-------------------- Syndicate network for media culture and media art information and archive: http://www.v2.nl/syndicate to unsubscribe, write to <syndicate-request@aec.at> in the body of the msg: unsubscribe your@email.adress