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Taken from Homan Rights Watch
website.
3.8.2005
(New York,
July 27, 2005) — Iran’s execution of a juvenile offender last
week violated international law, Human Rights Watch said today
in letters to the president and head of the judiciary.
Two youths, aged eighteen and
nineteen, were put to death on July 19 after they were found
guilty of sexually assaulting a thirteen-year-old boy some
fourteen months earlier. One of the youths was seventeen at
the time of the offense.
“Death is an inhumane punishment, particularly for someone
under eighteen at the time of his crimes,” said Hadi Ghaemi,
Iran researcher for Human Rights Watch. “All but a handful of
countries forbid such executions. Iran should as well.”
Before the two youths were put to death, each also received
228 lashes for theft, disturbing public order, and consuming
alcohol.
The Convention on the Rights of the Child and the
International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights prohibit
the imposition of the death penalty for crimes committed
before the age of eighteen. These treaties also prohibit the
use of torture and cruel, inhuman, or degrading punishments.
Iran has ratified both treaties.
Iran is thought to have executed at least four other juvenile
offenders in 2004, and at least thirty juvenile offenders are
on the country’s death row. Human Rights Watch has confirmed
the names and ages at the time of offense of five juvenile
offenders under sentence of death in Iran: Milad Bakhtiari, 17
years old; Hussein Haghi, 16 years old; Hussein Taranj, 17
years old; Farshad Saeedi, 17 years old; Saeed Khorrami, 16
years old.
Elsewhere in the world, only China, the Democratic Republic of
Congo, Pakistan, and the United States are known to have put
juvenile offenders to death in the past five years. The United
States executed nine juvenile offenders during this period;
the other countries are each known to have put one juvenile
offender to death. The U.S. Supreme Court declared the
juvenile death penalty unconstitutional in March 2005.
Iran’s Majlis has for four years considered legislation that
would amend the civil code to prohibit executions for crimes
committed under the age of eighteen. Human Rights Watch, which
opposes capital punishment in all circumstances, urged Iran’s
leadership to support the change and to prohibit the
imposition of amputation, flogging, and stoning as criminal
penalties. |