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Oct 19, 2009
Focus: Children
Action Request: Write E-Mail
Location: Iran, Islamic Republic Of

   


By : Mohammad Mostafaei, lawyer, Iran
Source: http://www.mohegh.blogfa.com/post-212.aspx  (English)
Source: http://www.mohegh.blogfa.com/post-211.aspx (Persian)

After Behnood’s death, the time has come for three other youngsters to go to the gallows. All three were charged for crimes they had committed when they were minors (under the age of 18).  The alleged charge was premeditated murder. Safar Angooti will go to the gallows on…October 21st According to some reports, Mohammad Reza Haddadi and Amir Amrollahi will also be hanged next week. The considerable efforts to get the victims’ families’ consent to stop the executions have regrettably been unsuccessful. Additionally, there are 5 other youth whose death sentences could be carried out at any moment. Some of the victims’ families have agreed to give up their right for retribution in return for financial compensation, but my clients’ families are not in a position to come up with monetary compensation. I would like to warn that some individuals and organizations have been collecting funds under my name. If there is any need to collect funds to compensate the victims’ families, I will announce it publicly through this weblog, and all the funds that are received will be legal. I would urge everyone who wants to contribute to be in direct contact with myself.

Safar Angooti, Date of Birth September 20th 1989, 17 years old at the time of the crime
Following his arrest, Safar described the incident as follows:
“My friends Mohammad, Mostafa, Cyrus, Esmail, and I were taking a stroll on Taleghani Street between 7:30 pm to 8:00 pm. After hanging around for a few minutes, one of my friends suggested that we go to Negarestan Street. When we arrived at the end of the alley, we saw two people standing there. One of them, the victim (Mehdi), was talking to Fatemeh, the girl I loved. The other one, named Moshtaba, was a friend of the victim. As soon as Fatemeh saw me, she hid and then left the area. Mehdi walked towards me and asked me what I wanted, to which I replied that I had just come to say hello. He told me to get on his motorcycle, as he wanted to take me somewhere. I was not afraid, so I got on. After a short distance, he stopped the bike. He looked drunk. He told me I had a lot of nerve, and then he insulted me. We then got into a fight. My friends separated us. I was very afraid, so I walked home and took a knife, which I then put in my belt. I left my house and walked towards a friend’s house. As I was walking, I heard the sound of an approaching motorcycle behind me. When I turned around, I saw that Mehdi was speeding towards me. In my fright, I pulled out the knife, without intending to stab him. I told him to stop and asked him what he wanted of me, but he did not stop and continued towards me. I don’t know what happened and didn’t realize that the knife had struck him, but, in my bad luck, the knife had caught his collar and made him lose his balance. Mehdi, having lost control of the bike, collided with a nearby parked van, causing the blade of the knife to penetrate his neck. I did not know what to do, so I fled the scene of the accident. I ran into an abandoned dump and stayed there until midnight. After that I went to Fatemeh’s house and told her father that I had stabbed someone because of his daughter. He told me to flee. I went to Saderat Street, where I saw a group of my friends and got some money from them. From there I went to the city of Ghom, where I went into the shrine of Masoumeh. My conscience was killing me, so, after talking to God, I decided to give myself in. I returned home and went to the police precinct with my father, where I surrendered myself.”
On April 3rd, 2007, at 9 pm, the emergency unit of the Karaj Police received a phone call reporting a fight in Behasht Street, which is located in the Nazar-Abad neighborhood of the Hashtgerd municipality. According to the report, a male named Mehdi Rezai had been wounded in his neck. A day later, Safar Angouti, after being on the run, declared to the Police that he had stabbed Mehdi during a fight. He claimed that, because of his own negligence, his knife had hit Mehdi’s neck. Following Mehdi’s collision with a nearby parked car, the knife had then penetrated his neck.
Safar said that his love for the 14 year old Fatemeh was his motive. He claimed that he engaged the victim on the day of the crime because he saw him speaking to the girl he loved. Fatemeh was 14 years old, and Safar had fallen in love with her after seeing her a few times.
Regrettably, the fate of these two young men was changed because of a childish fight which resulted in death for one of them and imprisonment for the other. The honorable judges of the 71st District of the Tehran criminal court, Messier Aziz-Mohammadi, Hosseini, Soleimani-Nia and Salari, however, did not take 3 major factors into consideration in their final ruling: 1 - the absence of premeditation 2 - Safar’s age at the time of the crime, and, finally, 3 - Mehdi’s collision with the parked van that resulted in his death. Therefore, my client was found guilty of murder and sentenced to death (a life for a life), but he should have been tried for manslaughter. The ruling was sent to the 10th District of the Supreme Court after an appeal was filed in relation to the three aforementioned points. In a judgment that consisted of three sentences, the presiding judges Messier Sahebolzamani and Majdi confirmed the verdict and sent the file to the enforcement branch. As of today, and against all legal norms, the head of the Judiciary has endorsed the ruling. Per his order, Safar Angouti will have the same fate as Behnoud Shojaee and will be hanged on October 21st, 2009 at 4 am at Evin prison in Tehran.
Safar Angouti was born to a poor family and he has two siblings. He is currently held at Rajai-Shahr prison in Karaj. His only hope now is an order by the Judiciary or the consent of the victim’s family to stop his execution. He has been to gallows twicem and each time his execution has been stopped by the order of the judiciary.
Mohammad Reza Haddadi, Date of Birth: March 17th, 1988, 15 Years Old at the Time his Arrest
In a recent visit to the enforcement branch of the Shiraz Tribunal, Mohammad Reza Haddadi’s father has been told that the branch has ordered the Shiraz prison to carry out his son’s sentence. During his last visit to the branch he was told that the hanging would take place in the coming days at Adel-Abad Prison in Shiraz. I, as the defense lawyer, have not received notice of the date of his execution. In the past, one of my clients, Behnam Zarei, was hanged without my knowledge.
On August 21st, 2003, Hossein Rahmat filed a missing person report with the Kazeroun police for his father, Mohammad-Bagher, who had not returned after leaving on a trip to Shiraz 2 days prior. 9 days later, on August 30th, 2003, he informed the authorities that his father’s car was found in Fath-Abad, a village near Kazaeroun. During the police investigation, a man named

 

Mehdi Sasani confessed that he, along with Mohammad Ghorbani, Taghi and Karim, had abducted Mohammad-Bagher and killed him later.
On October 12th, 2003, a man named Karim Haddadi was arrested. He said in the deposition, ”… I, along with Mehdi Sasani, Taghi Haddadi and Mohammad, were waiting on the road next to Emam-Zadeh Sayed Hossein. At about midnight we saw an orange sport Paykan approaching. Mohammad Ghorbani and Taghi Haddad both made a sign and the car stopped. We got in the car. When we passed Ghaemieh on the way to Shiraz, Mohammad asked the driver if he would agree to take another passenger in return for more money. The driver agreed. During the ride we asked the driver to make a stop so we could relieve ourselves, and he stopped the car on the side of the road. Mohammad and I went down the hill; Mehdo and Taghi stayed with the driver. As the driver was pouring water into the radiator of the car, Taghi hit him on the head with a rock. The driver fell to the ground. When Mohammad and I returned, we all started beating the driver all over his body. We then put his body in the trunk and drove until we reached Hakim-Bashi and Roshnabad. While we were driving we realized that the driver was still alive and was making noises from inside the trunk. We drove to a side road and Taghi stopped the car. When we opened the trunk the old man was still alive. Mehdi Sasani hit him twice with a bat, and the old man fell to the ground. Mohammad and Taghi then strangled him with plastic wire. Taghi suggested that we burn the body. We brought some gasoline and set the body on fire. We then dumped the body in a ditch and covered it with leaves.”
The medical examiner was not able to define the exact cause of death and ruled that concussion and scalp fracture were likely causes of death.
During further investigations, my client, Mohammad Reza Haddadi, who was 15 ½ years old at the time, was arrested. In the initial questioning he claimed that he had strangled the victim with a plastic wire. On October 30th, 2003, in the arraignment, my client agreed to the charges and confessed to having committed the crime.
A few days after the hearing Mohammad Reza’s mother went to visit him in prison. Mohammad Reza asked her if she had received the money. After his mother confirmed that she had not, Mohammad Reza realized that he had been played by the other defendants. On November 4th, 2003, in a letter, he informed the court officials that he agreed to accept the charges in return for money after he was deceived by the other defendants, who were older and more mature than him. He claimed that he was innocent and had not been a party to the crime.
In the end Mohammad Reza’s claims and his denial were not investigated, and on January 6th, 2004, based only on his initial confession, the court found him guilty of murder. He was sentenced to death on charges of murder, 15 years of prison for taking part in kidnapping (Article 621 of Islamic Criminal Law) and 1 year of prison for hiding the body of the victim

 

(Article 636 of the same law). The other defendants were found guilty of kidnapping, hiding the body of the victim and mutilation of a corpse and were sentenced to long prison terms.
The defendants appealed the ruling, and, on June 25th, 2005, the case was sent to District 42 of the Supreme Court. Their appeal was rejected by the court, who agreed with the initial ruling.
Since the ruling, new evidence has been introduced to the court, including the confession of the other defendants, who have all admitted my client’s innocence. Based on Article 18, we have asked for an investigation of the new evidence, as well as called for a new trial. District 3 of the Supreme Court has denied our request. If they valued human life, they would have ordered a thorough investigation of the case. Mohammad Reza has claimed repeatedly that he has been lured by the other defendants, who promised to pay money to his family. One of the co-defendants had promised to help him marry his cousin, whom he loved, if he confessed to committing the murder. Mohammad Reza was a minor and lacked maturity of thought. He comes from a low income family and loved the girl. He finally gave in and agreed to their demands.
The young man dies a thousand times everyday. He faces the nightmare of death despite being innocent.
Amir Amirolahi, Date of Birth: November 1st, 1989, 17 years old at the time of his arrest
On November 19th, 2005, at about 11:30 am, Amir and a group of his friends (Hassan Mohammadi and Ali Salmani) were hanging out in front of a bakery on Azadegan Street in Shiraz, when the victim, Mohsen Kazemi, and his friend Javad Vaziri showed up. The teenagers got into a fight after the victim and one of Amir’s friends started to stare at each other. Amir decided to intervene and asked his friend Ali Salamani to lend him his knife in case he had to defend himself. He also wanted to scare the other group with the knife and make them run away. Apparently the victim started to beat Amir, who was very young, for no reason. Amir, who was provoked, showed the victim his knife to scare him, but the victim stubbornly stayed and hit Amir in the face. Amir retaliated by hitting him back with the knife handle to make him go away, but the victim did not give in. By that time, everyone was involved in the fighting. When the victim went toward Amir to hit him again, Amir pointed the knife at his assailant. The knife then suddenly penetrated the right side of the victim’s chest.
Amir, frightened, fled the scene and told his father about the accident on the same day it occured. He and his father went to the authorities, where Amir turned himself in. At the time, Amir did not have any idea that four out of the five judges would sentence him to death without any consideration for his age or his state of mind.
Anyhow, the judges of the 5th District of the Shiraz criminal tribunal found him guilty, and their ruling was upheld by District 27 of the Supreme Court. The case was then referred to the enforcement branch and was endorsed by the head of the judiciary, who decided that the sentence should be carried out. The young man was only 16 at the time of the crime. When

   tAmir’s father went to the enforcement branch recently, he was told that the death sentence of his son would be carried out in the next few days.
There are serious grounds for objection to the death sentence, and the ruling is filled with ambiguous points:
1- As one of the experts of the district court testified, Amir was 16 years old at the time of the crime and lacked judgment to exercise self-control when faced with problematic situations. The opinion of the expert should have been taken into consideration by the court. The court should have ordered an examination by medical experts to find out if Amir was legally mature at the time of the crime. The following facts must also be taken into consideration. Islamic Criminal Law does not define the age of maturity in criminal cases. Maturity is only defined from a religious perspective. Furthermore, considering that there are other parts of the same law where minors have been defined criminally not responsible as a result of their age – which, in my client’s case, should be an advantage – the request for an examination of my client’s maturity by experts should have been taken seriously. Instead, the ruling was issued hurriedly the same day that the court expert had testified about Amir’s age. This is an important defense argument and can have a significant impact on the outcome.

2- The financial situation of Amir and his family had made it impossible for them to hire a professional defense lawyer; therefore, they had to use the services of a court appointed lawyer. As a result of his old age and his illness, the court appointed lawyer could not sufficiently argue the shortcomings and inconsistencies in the prosecutor’s case. Amir’s emotional and psychological state often makes him lose control of his acts. During these nervous breakdowns he commits acts that are out of his control. Thus, it would have been essential to his defense case to have him examined by the experts of the ME’s office, who could have given an expert opinion on Amir’s periodic sessions of insanity. Additionally, he was treated with tranquilizers while he was detained in the juvenile detention center. All the documents relating to his treatment are available. This is another important fact that was not taken into consideration. The ruling remains ambiguous when it comes to my client’s psychological state. Although Amir has expressed remorse for his act, the fact remains that he never intended to commit it in the first place. He committed an act that was out of his control without any prior motive or premeditation.

3- As is clear from the testimony of different witnesses, when the victim fell to the ground, many people were present at the scene. However, none of them made any effort to take the victim to a medical facility. The ambulance arrived at the scene 30 minutes later and took the victim to the hospital, where he later died. This brings us to an important point: by the time the victim was taken to the hospital, he had already lost a lot of blood and was unconscious. The hospital to which he was taken was not well equipped, otherwise, with proper medical help, he would have survived. The honorable judges and court

 

 

officers should have executed a thorough investigation into the cause of death. If the victim died as a result of excessive bleeding and not because of my client’s action, the charge should have been reduced to manslaughter. Therefore, the ruling which was issued for the charge of premeditate murder is illegal and against religious norms.

4- Article 206( of Islamic Criminal Law defines premeditated murder as: “when a person intentionally commits a premeditated act that results in the death of another person.” All the evidence and contents in the case against Amir prove that he did not intend nor premeditate his act. Had he intended to kill the victim, he would have stabbed him in the heart. The tragedy happened when Amir, faced with the stubbornness of the victim, lost control and unknowingly hit him. Amir ended up in prison and another family lost their son.

Finally

One important issue that has been neglected by all the judges who have tried similar cases is the fact that in 1993 the Majlis debated the Convention on the Rights of the Child durin a open session. The honorable members of the Majlis ratified the convention by a majority and sent the bill to the honorable Guardian Council for approval. The honorable members of the Guardian Council also conditionally ratified the convention. The single amendment attached by the Islamic Republic of Iran to the aforementioned convention states that “the Convention for the Rights of the Child, including its introduction and its 54 articles, is ratified and binding by the Islamic Republic of Iran if the content of each and every article is not in contravention with the national laws or the religious regulations. If they are in contravention, they will not be considered binding.” In their opinion #5760, the honorable members of the Guardian Council listed the articles that were in contravention with the religious laws. The list is as follows: “Articles 12 (1), 13 (1, 3), 14 (1, 3), 15 (2), 16 (1), and 29 (1-d) are in contravention with known Islamic norms.” Therefore, with the exclusion of the aforementioned articles, the rest of the articles of the Convention are not in contravention of Sharia law and shall be enforced by all officers of the courts, based on Article 9 of the civil law that states, “All international treaties that, in accordance with the Iranian Constitution, are articles of law.”
Article 37(a) of the Convention of the Rights of the Child states that, “..Neither capital punishment nor life imprisonment without possibility of release shall be imposed for offences committed by persons below eighteen years of age”. Therefore, death sentences issued to young offenders culpable of murder are in strict contradiction with the law.”
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Posted: Oct 19, 2009 11:27pm
Oct 9, 2009
Focus: Human Rights
Action Request: Write Letter
Location: Iran, Islamic Republic Of

Two more juveniles: Behnood Shojaee and Safar Angooti are scheduled to to be executed in Iran. (to read more about their case visit the execution row)

Behnood had allegedly killed a boy during a street fight in Tehran when he was 17 years old. He has been in prison for the last 4 years and scheduled for execution 5 times already. And all the reports pointed to a stay of execution in his case.

In his weblog, his attorney Mohammad Mostafaie wrote:  "I went to the Executive office of the Tehran Criminal Court yesterday to follow up on Benood Shojai’s case. I was told by Mr. Jaberi, the clerk of the office that no date had been set for Behnood’s execution and a stay of execution is in effect. This morning I heard that Bahnood Shojai had been transferred to the isolation ward in prison. I went back to the Executive office to inquire about the case. Mr. Jaberi confirmed the execution and said that the Qisas( Islamic retaliation Law) will take place tomorrow”.

Bahnood was below the age of 18 when he committed the murder. The family of the victim had forgiven Behnood and had unequivocally given up their right to retribution (The right of victim’s family under Qisas law) in front of several witnesses namely : Ezzatollah Sahabi, Parviz Parastoui, Sayed Mohammad Mojabi, Dr. Golzari and a few others.

Mosatafai adds: “After I brought up the fact the family of the victim had given up their right to retribution, the file was sent back to the issuing court. The judges from the 74th provincial criminal court rejected the appeal arguing the verbal retrieval of family’s right to retribution even when it is confirmed by the witness affidavit o does not constitute a reasonable ground for appeal and the execution order shall remain in effect”.

Also in an opinion related to this case Ayatollah Makarem Shirazi had previously said:” where there is credible witness testimony on the forgiveness by the victim’s family such forgiveness remains irretrievable”.

 

PLEASE WRITE IMMEDIATELY in Persian, English, French, Arabic or your own language:
* Expressing concern that Behnood Shojaee and Safar Angoti are at risk of execution for a crime committed when they were under 18;
* calling on the Iranian authorities to commute his death sentence;
* reminding the authorities that Iran is a state party to the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) and the Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC), both of which prohibit the use of the death penalty against people convicted of crimes committed when they were under 18.


PLEASE SEND APPEALS TO:

Leader of the Islamic Republic:
Ayatollah Sayed ‘Ali Khamenei
The Office of the Supreme Leader
Islamic Republic Street – End of Shahid Keshvar Doust Street, 
Tehran, Islamic Republic of Iran
Email:  via website: http://www.leader.ir/langs/en/index.php?p=letter (English)
  http://www.leader.ir/langs/fa/index.php?p=letter (Persian) 


Head of the Judiciary:
Ayatollah Sadeqh Larijani
Howzeh Riyasat-e Qoveh Qazaiyeh (Office of the Head of the Judiciary) 
Pasteur St., Vali Asr Ave., south of Serah-e Jomhouri, 
Tehran 1316814737, 
Islamic Republic of Iran 
Email:  Via website: http://www.dadiran.ir/tabid/81/Default.aspx 
  First starred box:  your given name; second starred box: your family name;  
                        third: your email address

COPIES TO:

 

Director, Human Rights Headquarters of IranMohammad Javad Larijani
Howzeh Riassat-e Ghoveh Ghazaiyeh
Pasteur St, Vali Asr Ave., south of Serah-e Jomhuri, 
Tehran 1316814737, 
Islamic Republic of Iran
Fax   01198 21 3390 4986 (please keep trying)
Email:    \n fsharafi@bia-judiciary.ir This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it  or  \n int_aff@judiciary.ir This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it  (In the subject line: FAO  
                        Mohammad Javad Larijani)
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Posted: Oct 9, 2009 4:48pm
Jun 13, 2009




Date: Tuesday 30th June, 6pm

Venue: Thatcher Room, Portcullis House, Houses of Parliament


Speakers include:

Bill Rammell MP, Minister of State with responsibility for the Middle East, Foreign and Commonwealth Office

Nazanin Afshin-Jam, President of Stop Child Executions

Geraldine Van Bueren, Professor of International Human Rights Law, Queen Mary, University of London

Tom Porteous, Director, Human Rights Watch UK

Chair: Alistair Carmichael MP, Chair of the All Party Parliamentary Group for the Abolition of the Death Penalty


The Foreign Policy Centre, in partnership with Stop Child Executions, is hosting the launch of a major new report entitled, 'From Cradle to Coffin: A Report on Child Executions in Iran' written by Stop Child Executions and Tahirih Danesh. The report aims to provide a comprehensive documentation and analysis of Islamic Republc of Iran's executions of minors since the 1979 Revolution. It will highlight inconsistencies in the Iranian legal system, as well as contradictions between Iran's record of executing minors and its international human rights commitments. The report will put forward clear recommendations for action by the international community and human rights campaigners. Hard copies of the Report will be available free of charge at this event.

If you would like to attend the event or want further

information please send an email to: events@fpc.org.uk

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Posted: Jun 13, 2009 9:23am
Jun 4, 2009
Focus: Human Rights
Action Request: Write Letter
Location: Iran, Islamic Republic Of

Thursday, June 04, 2009

Source: http://www.peykeiran.com/Content.aspx?ID=1672

http://zamaaneh.com/news/2009/06/print_post_9221.html

 

Juvenile offender,  Ebrahim Goodarzvand Chegini is at imminent risk of execution for fatally stabbing his friend at age 17.

 

Iran Human Rights Activists have reported that Ebrahim was born on June 23rd 1986 and has been in Roudbar prison for the last six years since April 2003. It was reported that he was joking with his friend and in a childish confrontation he stabbed him in the chest which took his life.  His execution was confirmed by the Supreme Court for ghesas (retribution) and his family anticipates that head of Judiciary Ayatollah Shahroudi will approve his execution within the next few days. Iran Human Rights Activists have reported that Ebrahim does not have lawyer while Radio Zamaneh has reported that he only has a state appointed lawyer..

 

Please  send urgent appeals

- calling on the authorities to commute his death sentence, as he is facing execution for a crime committed when he was under 18 which in accordance with Iran’s obligations as a state party to the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and the Convention on the Rights of the Child, is against international human rights law.

APPEALS TO:

Head of the Judiciary

Ayatollah Mahmoud Hashemi Shahroudi

c/o Director, Judiciary Public Relations and Information Office

Ardeshir Sadiq

Judiciary Public Relations and Information Office

No. 57, Pasteur St., corner of Khosh Zaban Avenue

Tehran, Iran

Email:                        info@dadiran.ir  (In the subject line write: FAO Ayatollah Shahroudi)

Salutation:                Your Excellency

 

Judiciary spokesperson

Alireza Jamshidi

Howzeh Riyasat-e Qoveh Qazaiyeh / Office of the Head of the Judiciary

Pasteur St, Vali Asr Ave., south of Serah-e Jomhuri

Tehran 1316814737, Iran

Email:                      info@a-jamshidi.ir

Salutation:                Dear Sir

 

Leader of the Islamic Republic

Ayatollah Sayed ‘Ali Khamenei, The Office of the Supreme Leader

Islamic Republic Street – End of Shahid Keshvar Doust Street, Tehran, Islamic Republic of Iran

Email:                        info_leader@leader.ir

via website: http://www.leader.ir/langs/en/index.php?p=letter (English)

http://www.leader.ir/langs/fa/index.php?p=letter (Persian)

Salutation:                                Your Excellency       

 

 

COPIES TO:

Director, Human Rights Headquarters of Iran

Mohammad Javad Larijani

Howzeh Riyasat-e Qoveh Qazaiyeh / Office of the Head of the Judiciary

Pasteur St, Vali Asr Ave., south of Serah-e Jomhuri

Tehran 1316814737, Iran

Fax:                           +98 21 3390 4986 (please keep trying)

Email:                      info@dadgostary-tehran.ir (In the subject line write: FAO Javad Larijani)

Salutation:              Dear Mr Larijani

and to diplomatic representatives of Iran accredited to your country.

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Posted: Jun 4, 2009 3:32pm
May 29, 2009
Focus: Human Rights
Action Request: Write E-Mail
Location: Iran, Islamic Republic Of

PUBLIC                                                                                                        AI Index:  MDE 13/051/2009                    

                                                                                                                                           29 May 2009

 

UA 136/09           Fear of imminent execution                                     

 

IRAN                    Mehdi Mazroui (m), 24, alleged juvenile offender

 

 

Mehdi Mazroui is said to be at imminent risk of execution for a crime he is alleged to have committed when he was 17 years old. He was moved to a solitary cell in Dastgerd prison in Esfahan, Iran, on the morning of 29 May 2009, a step the Iranian authorities often take prior to execution.

 

Mehdi Mazroui was arrested in 2002 after a fight in which one person was killed, and sentenced to qesas-e nafs, or retribution, by a lower court in Esfahan in 2005. Details of the trial are not known. He confessed to the killing after alleged torture during which he was beaten, his hand was broken, his shoulder was dislocated and fingernails were removed. A high court in Tehran subsequently ordered the review of his sentence and returned the case to a different lower court in Esfahan for a retrial. The lower court again sentenced him to qesas-e nafs and this was confirmed by the Supreme Court in February 2009. The verdict is said to have been communicated to the relevant authorities for implementation.

 

BACKGROUND INFORMATION

Iran has executed at least 45 alleged juvenile offenders since 1990, eight of them in 2008 and at least two in 2009.

 

The execution of juvenile offenders is prohibited under international law, as stated in Article 6(5) of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) and the Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC), to which Iran is a state party, and so has undertaken not to execute anyone for crimes committed when they were under 18.

 

In Iran a person convicted of murder has no right to seek pardon or commutation from the state, in violation of Article 6(4) of the ICCPR. The family of a murder victim have the right either to insist on execution, or to pardon the killer and receive financial compensation (diyeh).

 

For more information about executions of juvenile offenders in Iran, please see Iran: The last executioner of children (Index: MDE 13/059/2007), June 2007, (http://web.amnesty.org/library/index/engmde130592007).

 

RECOMMENDED ACTION: Please send appeals to arrive as quickly as possible, in Persian, Arabic, English or your own language:

- expressing great concern at reports that Mehdi Mazroui may be at imminent risk of execution for a crime he allegedly committed when he was under 18;

- calling for re-trial of the case in proceedings meeting international standards for fair trial and in line with the Convention of the Rights of the Child, to which Iran is a state party:

- urging the Iranian authorities to commute his death sentence;

- reminding the authorities that Iran is a state party to the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) and the Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC), which prohibit the use of the death penalty against people convicted of crimes committed when they were under 18.

 

APPEALS TO:

Head of the Judiciary

Ayatollah Mahmoud Hashemi Shahroudi

Howzeh Riyasat-e Qoveh Qazaiyeh (Office of the Head of the Judiciary)

Pasteur St., Vali Asr Ave., south of Serah-e Jomhouri

Tehran 1316814737, Islamic Republic of Iran

Email:               shahroudi@dadgostary-tehran.ir (In the subject line write: FAO Ayatollah Shahroudi)

Salutation:       Your Excellency

 

Leader of the Islamic Republic

Ayatollah Sayed ‘Ali Khamenei, The Office of the Supreme Leader

Islamic Republic Street – End of Shahid Keshvar Doust Street, Tehran, Islamic Republic of Iran

Email:               info_leader@leader.ir

via website: http://www.leader.ir/langs/en/index.php?p=letter (English)

http://www.leader.ir/langs/fa/index.php?p=letter(Persian)

Salutation:       Your Excellency

 

COPIES TO:

Director, Human Rights Headquarters of Iran

Mohammad Javad Larijani

Howzeh Riyasat-e Qoveh Qazaiyeh / Office of the Head of the Judiciary

Pasteur St, Vali Asr Ave., south of Serah-e Jomhuri

Tehran 1316814737, Iran

Fax:                 +98 21 3390 4986 (please keep trying)

Email:               info@dadgostary-tehran.ir (In the subject line write: FAO Javad Larijani)

Salutation:       Dear Mr Larijani

 

and to diplomatic representatives of Iran accredited to your country.

 

PLEASE SEND APPEALS IMMEDIATELY. Check with the International Secretariat, or your section office, if sending appeals after 10 July 2009.

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Posted: May 29, 2009 11:23am
May 24, 2009
Focus: Human Rights
Action Request: Write E-Mail
Location: Iran, Islamic Republic Of



Although his lawyer Mr. Mohammad Mostafaei has not receive official notice of the execution date, he was informed by Mohammadreza’s father that he is scheduled to be executed on Wednesday May 27th at Adelabad prison in Shiraz where he has been imprisoned for the last 4 years.

Eighteen year old Mohammdreza Haddadi was sentenced to death by hanging for an alleged murder at the age of 15. His appeal was denied by the superior court and the file was sent to the division of enforcement of verdicts for final execution permit by Ayatollah Shahrudi, the head of Iran's judiciary.

Mohammad Reza Haddadi, aged 18, is held in Adelabad prison in the city of Shiraz. He was sentenced to death in January 2004 by a court in Kazeroun for the murder of a man in 2003. He had confessed to the murder, but retracted the confession during his trial, saying he had claimed responsibility for the killing because his two co-defendants had offered his family money if he did so. Mohammad Reza Haddadi stated during the trial that he had not taken part in murder of a man who had offered him and the two others a lift in his car. The two others later supported Mohammad Reza Haddadi's claims of innocence, and withdrew their testimony that implicated him in the murder. His co-defendants, both over 18 at the time of the crime, are said to have received lesser sentences. However, in July 2005, a branch of the Supreme Court upheld the death sentence against Mohammad Reza Haddadi and later authorized by Ayatollah Shahroudi, the Head of Iran's Judiciary.

Background:


Mohammad Reza's execution order was reported for the first time by Stop Child Executions Campaign in January 12, 2008 . At the time no details were available until the new attorney Mohammad Mostafaei met Mohammadreza in Shiraz prison in the first week of February 2008. Subsequent to the initial report by SCE, the president of the European Union on behlaf of 42 countries listed Mohammadreza's name in its letter to Iranian authorities condemning the execution order. (Januray 25, 2008). 

In a recent letter to Shahrudi, Mohammad Mostafaei detailed the incident and the flaws in the judicial processing of the case. According to the testimony of Karim Haddadi :

“ Mohammadreza Haddadi was accompanied by 3 adults: Mohammad Ghorbani, Karim Haaddai and his cousin Taghi Haddadi. They asked an old man to drive them to neighboring city and along the way when the driver stopped to fill the car radiator with water, Taghi Haddadi hit the driver in the head with a rock. According to Taghi they all beat the driver and dragged his body to the trunk of the car and drove away. According to the testimony, when they heard that the man was still alive, Taghi stoped the car and Mehdi hit the man with a piece of wood in the head. Karim testified that Taghi and 15 year old Mohammadreza strangled the man.  Then they burned the body and buried it. After the arrest, Mohammadreza confess to murdering the man. 

Following one of the court sessions he asked his mother if she had received a substantial amount of money promised to him by the three other men in return for his confession. After finding out that no money was given to his mother, he stated that he was lead to confession by the adults and  had nothing to do with the crime..

Regardless the court decided that  Mohammadreza was guilty of murder. He was sentenced to death while the three adults were sentenced to long imprisonments. 

Despite the fact that the other men later testified that Mohammadreza was innocent of the crime, his appeal was still denied and the execution order was confirmed . Th file was sent to division of enforcement of verdicts. The file incorrectly showed Mohammad's age at the time of murder as 19 instead of 15.  In his letter, Mostafaei asked Shahrudi to order further review of the file based on the retracted testimony of others.

Mohammadreza Haddadi was scheduled to be executed on October 9th 2008, but his execution was stayed by Ayatollah  Shahrudi.

Considering Mohammad Reza's age at the time, it was highly unlikely that the murder was planned and executed by the 15 year old instead of the other adults involved in the crime.. It is likely that Mohammad was "influenced" and taken advantage of by the adults, due to his immaturity in confessing to the crime in hopes of that due to his young age, the verdict would be more lenient.

Stop Child Executions Campaign recognizes the right and responsibility of governments to bring to justice those suspected of criminal offenses, but is opposed to the death penalty in all circumstances especially for those person guilty of crimes committed before the age of 18.

SCE has informed the High Commission on Human Rights at the United Nations and other international bodies.

For read more about Mohammad Reza visit: http://scenews.blog.com/Mohammadreza%20Haddadi/

 

Please  send urgent appeals

- calling on the authorities to commute his death sentence, as he is facing execution for a crime committed when he was under 18 which in accordance with Iran’s obligations as a state party to the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and the Convention on the Rights of the Child, is against international human rights law.

APPEALS TO:

Head of the Judiciary

Ayatollah Mahmoud Hashemi Shahroudi

c/o Director, Judiciary Public Relations and Information Office

Ardeshir Sadiq

Judiciary Public Relations and Information Office

No. 57, Pasteur St., corner of Khosh Zaban Avenue

Tehran, Iran

Email:                     info@dadiran.ir  (In the subject line write: FAO Ayatollah Shahroudi)

Salutation:           Your Excellency

 

Judiciary spokesperson

Alireza Jamshidi

Howzeh Riyasat-e Qoveh Qazaiyeh / Office of the Head of the Judiciary

Pasteur St, Vali Asr Ave., south of Serah-e Jomhuri

Tehran 1316814737, Iran

Email:                    info@a-jamshidi.ir

Salutation:           Dear Sir

 

Leader of the Islamic Republic

Ayatollah Sayed ‘Ali Khamenei, The Office of the Supreme Leader

Islamic Republic Street – End of Shahid Keshvar Doust Street, Tehran, Islamic Republic of Iran

Email:                     info_leader@leader.ir

via website: http://www.leader.ir/langs/en/index.php?p=letter (English)

http://www.leader.ir/langs/fa/index.php?p=letter (Persian)

Salutation:                           Your Excellency       

 

 

COPIES TO:

Director, Human Rights Headquarters of Iran

Mohammad Javad Larijani

Howzeh Riyasat-e Qoveh Qazaiyeh / Office of the Head of the Judiciary

Pasteur St, Vali Asr Ave., south of Serah-e Jomhuri

Tehran 1316814737, Iran

Fax:                         +98 21 3390 4986 (please keep trying)

Email:                    info@dadgostary-tehran.ir (In the subject line write: FAO Javad Larijani)

Salutation:          Dear Mr Larijani

and to diplomatic representatives of Iran accredited to your country.

 

 

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Posted: May 24, 2009 5:55pm

 

 
 
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