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IRAN: Judiciary official says woman to be stoned for husband’s murder, not just adultery

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In a surprise announcement, a judiciary official in provincial Iran said a woman who had been convicted and sentenced to stoning for adultery had also been convicted of murder.

Sakineh Mohammadi Ashtiani, a 43-year-old mother of two in the Tabriz area, had been convicted of cheating on her late husband, apparently a murder victim, and sentenced to die by stoning, a ruling that is officially under review, according to Iranian judiciary officials.

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But on Sunday, Malek Ejdar Sharifi, head of East Azerbaijan Province’s judiciary, told the official Islamic Republic News Agency (in Persian): ‘Sakineh Mohammadi Ashtiani has not been convicted of illicit sex only,’ he said. ‘’She has been found guilty of numerous and extremely heavy offenses. She was sentenced to capital punishment [in 2006] in the criminal court in Tabriz, the center of the province, for committing murder, manslaughter and adultery.’

That’s fresh news. Up until Sharifi’s comments, Iranian officials and her lawyer said she was only convicted of adultery. Her lawyer, Mohammad Mostafai, said his client had been convicted of having a hand in her husband’s death but that the charge played no role in the death sentence against her, especially since her children did not want to pursue the murder charge against their mother. She was handed a 10-year sentence for the murder, her lawyer said.

‘In the first place, the allegation was murder,’ the lawyer told Babylon & Beyond. ‘She was accused of killing her husband, but as her children forgave her ... she was pardoned and there was no more allegation against her. But to complicate the case, the court raised the issue of adultery.’ Sharifi declined to outline Ashtiani’s role in her husband’s death, saying it would be just too darn shocking for the public.

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‘We can’t express the details of her crimes due to moral and humane considerations,’ he said. ‘If the way her husband has been murdered is expressed, the brutality and insanity of this woman would be laid bare to public opinion. Her contribution to the murder of her husband was so harsh and heart-breaking that many criminologists believe that it would have been better for her to have decapitated her husband.’

Sharifi confirmed that the death sentence against Ashtiani is under review but said the decision to hold off on the execution had nothing to do with the negative light the case has shined on Iran’s legal system.

‘The judiciary is firm and determined in enforcing the law,’ he said. ‘Anytime the head of the judiciary gives the nod, the execution of Sakineh Mohammadi Ashtiani will be carried out, regardless of the media hype waged by Western media.’

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He described ‘self-declared promoters of human rights in the West’ as hypocrites. ‘They commit crimes across the world against innocent nations, including Iraq, Afghanistan and Palestine, but we hear no condemnation or protest from the so-called human rights bodies,’ he claimed.

In other news out of Tabriz, an Iranian human rights organization alleges that a 26-year-old woman was raped and murdered by pro-government Basiji militiamen last week after she was stopped for wearing clothes deemed not Islamic enough.

According to the report by the Human Rights Activists News Agency (in Persian), the hard-line Islamic militiamen stopped Elnaz Babazadeh’s car in the eastern Vali Asr district of the western Iran city because she was allegedly dressed improperly. (The blog Persian2English has an English translation of the report.)

‘She resisted the forces and ignored the orders of the Basij forces,’ the report said. ‘Then the Basij forces, who initially stopped her, jumped into Elnaz’s car and threatened her with a gun.’

The Basiji militiamen beat and raped the 26-year-old, dumping her body close to the Emamiyeh cemetery, according to the report.

The human rights group says that the person who killed her was the son of a high-ranking member of the Revolutionary Guard. Babazadeh’s family has filed a court case against the alleged perpetrators.

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-- Los Angeles Times

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