To His Excellency Ayatollah Amoli Larijani, Head of Judiciary of the Islamic Republic of Iran,
The violent and unjust treatment of students during the past few weeks in Iran has brought a great deal of concern in the international academic community, which prompted us to write to you as the highest authority in the Judiciary of the Islamic Republic of Iran.
Read More
Reporting human rights abuses done in the name of Allah. The clergymen in the muslim countries systematically break the spirits of entire nations by depriving them of their own lives. There is no functioning civil law. Only the sharia law. The results are Human rights abuses against children, women, apostates, infidels, homosexuals, political reformists, etc. Only the muslim, heterosexual, adult and the "political correct", have a voice!
2010/08/18
2010/08/16
Iran Solidarity: New Documents from Tabriz and Tehran Courts on Sakineh Ashtaiani’s Case
Thursday, 12 August 2010
New Documents from Tabriz and Tehran Courts on Sakineh Ashtaiani’s Case
PR No. 37, August 7, 2010
Also following: Open Letter by Houtan Kia, one of Sakineh’s Lawyers, to Human Rights Authorities
It was three ago that I was acquainted with Sakineh Ashtian’s case, and the likelihood of her stoning sentence being carried out, through her children’s telephone call to me at International Committee Against Stoning (ICAS). Sakineh had then been sentenced to stoning by the Province Court of Tabriz (capital city of Eastern Azerbaijan) for ‘adultery’. The sentence had subsequently been confirmed by the Supreme Court in Tehran. At this point her children had decided to resort to ICAS, determined to save their mother’s life.
New Documents from Tabriz and Tehran Courts on Sakineh Ashtaiani’s Case
PR No. 37, August 7, 2010
Also following: Open Letter by Houtan Kia, one of Sakineh’s Lawyers, to Human Rights Authorities
It was three ago that I was acquainted with Sakineh Ashtian’s case, and the likelihood of her stoning sentence being carried out, through her children’s telephone call to me at International Committee Against Stoning (ICAS). Sakineh had then been sentenced to stoning by the Province Court of Tabriz (capital city of Eastern Azerbaijan) for ‘adultery’. The sentence had subsequently been confirmed by the Supreme Court in Tehran. At this point her children had decided to resort to ICAS, determined to save their mother’s life.
A Report from Rajai Shahr Prison For Anyone Who is Willing to Listen
A Report from Rajai Shahr Prison For Anyone Who is Willing to Listen
Translator's Note: I ask anyone who cares about Human Rights, to read the heart breaking letter written by Saeed Masouri, describing the harrowing conditions at Rajai Shar Prison. I ask that you read his account and inform the world of the Human Rights violations and atrocities taking place behind the prison walls in Iran's notorious prisons; for remaining silent is turning our back on humanity, common decency and the dignity for life.
Translator's Note: I ask anyone who cares about Human Rights, to read the heart breaking letter written by Saeed Masouri, describing the harrowing conditions at Rajai Shar Prison. I ask that you read his account and inform the world of the Human Rights violations and atrocities taking place behind the prison walls in Iran's notorious prisons; for remaining silent is turning our back on humanity, common decency and the dignity for life.
2010/08/15
Mina Ahadi’s open letter to Nelson Mandela
Mina Ahadi's Open Letter to Nelson Mandela
Dear Mr. Mandela,
I am writing to appeal to you to intervene immediately in order to help save the life of a woman sentenced to be stoned to death or, at least, hanged imminently in Iran. Her Name is Sakineh Mohammadi-Ashtiaani, which, I presume, you are familiar with by now through the news about the on-going global campaign to save her life and free her from jail.
One example of the international efforts in this direction has been the offer of asylum for Sakineh and her family in Brazil by President Lula da Silva. Although the offer has been rejected by the regime, which, for all intents and purposes, is intent on killing her, it is an example the world needs to see followed by other heads of states. It will increase the international pressure – a tremendously effective force to which the Islamist regime will in the end have to surrender.
According to well documented published figures by the International Committee Against Stoning that I represent (http://stopstonningnow.com/wpress/1812), the regime has so far stoned 109 men and women to death, and there are 25 more agonizingly awaiting their turn. Surely, this tragedy cannot be allowed to continue. I therefore also appeal to you to take any action in your power to wrest this terroristic weapon from the grasp of this regime, as well as that of the other similar regimes, with the help of the civilized humanity your global respect will no doubt enlist. Therefore, I hereby appeal to you to not only save Sakineh but also support the demand for the immediate abolition of stoning in Iran and throughout the world.
Further, I would not presume to describe the horrors of living under a theocratic regime of the most deprave nature to you, Nelson Mandela. Its whole 31-year track record can be summed up in one word: terror. Thanks to ruling by sheer terror, it has managed to create a whole system of sexual, social, ethnic, racial and even religious apartheid in Iran which takes its victims, naturally, from across the social/sexual spectrum. However, as you are certainly well aware, a mass revolutionary movement has been underway in Iran since June 2009, bent on overthrowing this regime of terror and apartheid.
Parallel with the advance of the movement the regime has stepped up its atrocious, terror-instilling crimes not only in Iran but across the world in the delusional hope of ensuring its survival. As far as the international community is concerned, the only feasible, civilized and least painful way for it to truly rid itself of this global menace is to support the Iranian people’s revolutionary movement. For this to materialize, the first step has to be the total banishment of the Islamist regime from the rest of humanity.
The modern world simply must refuse to recognize a barbaric regime that stones people to death. All its embassies must be closed; all its medley of ‘centers’ and ‘societies’ must be closed; all political ties with it must be broken; it must be expelled from all international bodies; etc.
Total political boycott! Total South Africanization of the apartheid regime in Iran, in line with what the united humanity finally did to bring apartheid down to its knees in South Africa! Nothing short of that will work. And here the civilized humanity naturally expects to see the South Africa of today bear the standard of struggle once again.
Yours truly,
Mina Ahadi
Spokesperson
International Committee Against Stoning (http://stopstonningnow.com) and
International Committee Against Execution (http://notonemoreexecution.org/)
Dear Mr. Mandela,
I am writing to appeal to you to intervene immediately in order to help save the life of a woman sentenced to be stoned to death or, at least, hanged imminently in Iran. Her Name is Sakineh Mohammadi-Ashtiaani, which, I presume, you are familiar with by now through the news about the on-going global campaign to save her life and free her from jail.
One example of the international efforts in this direction has been the offer of asylum for Sakineh and her family in Brazil by President Lula da Silva. Although the offer has been rejected by the regime, which, for all intents and purposes, is intent on killing her, it is an example the world needs to see followed by other heads of states. It will increase the international pressure – a tremendously effective force to which the Islamist regime will in the end have to surrender.
According to well documented published figures by the International Committee Against Stoning that I represent (http://stopstonningnow.com/wpress/1812), the regime has so far stoned 109 men and women to death, and there are 25 more agonizingly awaiting their turn. Surely, this tragedy cannot be allowed to continue. I therefore also appeal to you to take any action in your power to wrest this terroristic weapon from the grasp of this regime, as well as that of the other similar regimes, with the help of the civilized humanity your global respect will no doubt enlist. Therefore, I hereby appeal to you to not only save Sakineh but also support the demand for the immediate abolition of stoning in Iran and throughout the world.
Further, I would not presume to describe the horrors of living under a theocratic regime of the most deprave nature to you, Nelson Mandela. Its whole 31-year track record can be summed up in one word: terror. Thanks to ruling by sheer terror, it has managed to create a whole system of sexual, social, ethnic, racial and even religious apartheid in Iran which takes its victims, naturally, from across the social/sexual spectrum. However, as you are certainly well aware, a mass revolutionary movement has been underway in Iran since June 2009, bent on overthrowing this regime of terror and apartheid.
Parallel with the advance of the movement the regime has stepped up its atrocious, terror-instilling crimes not only in Iran but across the world in the delusional hope of ensuring its survival. As far as the international community is concerned, the only feasible, civilized and least painful way for it to truly rid itself of this global menace is to support the Iranian people’s revolutionary movement. For this to materialize, the first step has to be the total banishment of the Islamist regime from the rest of humanity.
The modern world simply must refuse to recognize a barbaric regime that stones people to death. All its embassies must be closed; all its medley of ‘centers’ and ‘societies’ must be closed; all political ties with it must be broken; it must be expelled from all international bodies; etc.
Total political boycott! Total South Africanization of the apartheid regime in Iran, in line with what the united humanity finally did to bring apartheid down to its knees in South Africa! Nothing short of that will work. And here the civilized humanity naturally expects to see the South Africa of today bear the standard of struggle once again.
Yours truly,
Mina Ahadi
Spokesperson
International Committee Against Stoning (http://stopstonningnow.com) and
International Committee Against Execution (http://notonemoreexecution.org/)
2010/08/14
Iran Iranians still facing death by stoning despite 'reprieve'
Iranians still facing death by stoning despite 'reprieve'
Saeed Kamali Dehghan and Ian Black Guardian.co.uk
An Iranian woman at a protest in Brussels highlights the barbarity of death by stoning, in which women are buried up to their necks in front of a crowd of volunteers and killed in a hail of rocks. Photograph: Thierry Roge/Reuters.
Twelve Iranian women and three men are on death row awaiting execution by stoning despite an apparent last-minute reprieve for a mother of two who had been facing the horrific sentence after being convicted of adultery.
Human rights groups and activists welcomed a wave of international publicity and protests over the case of Sakineh Mohammadi Ashtiani, 43, who was awaiting execution in the western Iranian town of Tabriz after what her lawyer called an unjust trial and a sham conviction.
The Iranian embassy in London said in a statement that "according to information from the relevant judicial authorities" the stoning would not go ahead. If confirmed it would be an victory for a brief but intense campaign that was first highlighted by the Guardian last week.
However, there are still concerns over her plight. In a previous case a prisoner who was to be stoned was instead executed by hanging.
Speaking to this paper Mohammadi Ashtiani's son Sajad, said his mother – whom he had spoken to by telephone – believed the pressure on her behalf might succeed, although he had not heard of any reprieve. "The campaign for her release is going very well," he said. "They gave me permission to talk to her and she was very thankful to the people of the world for supporting her. I'm very happy that so many have joined me in protesting this injustice. It was the first time in years I heard any hope in my mother's voice."
Without a reprieve, Mohammadi Ashtiani would have been buried up to her neck before being pelted with stones large enough to cause pain but not so large as to kill her immediately. Iran routinely censors information about executions, but all the 12 other women on death row have been convicted on adultery charges, as has one of the three men.
Azar Bagheri, 19, was arrested when she was 15 after her husband accused her of seeing another man. She has been subjected to mock stonings along with partial burial in the ground.
Ashraf Kalhori, 40, also sentenced to death by stoning, was forced to confess to a relationship with her husband's murderer, and has been in Tehran's Evin prison for seven years, according to her lawyer.
In one especially gruesome case, Maryam Ayubi, another alleged adulteress, fainted while being ritually washed before her execution in 2001 and was stoned to death while strapped to a stretcher. Outrage over that led to the marking of 11 July as the annual international day against stoning – which will see demonstrations at the Iran embassy in London.
Iranian activists say the tragedy is that the families of those sentenced to death often ignore them. "It doesn't matter to them whether the charge of adultery is true or not because the honour of the family is tainted so they forget the poor creature awaiting death," said Soheila Vahdati, who is now based in California.
"It's not possible to talk about these prisoners in public because their families don't want their names mentioned or their pictures published. Their families don't want to defend them neither. Mohammadi Ashtiani's case is amazing because her children are campaigning for her courageously and said that their mother is innocent."
Shammameh Ghorbani, who is awaiting stoning, begged not to be freed from prison because she feared being killed by her family.
Shadi Sadr, an acclaimed Iranian lawyer, said it was hard to know exactly how many people were still facing stoning. Last year the Iranian parliament passed a law banning it, but the powerful Guardian Council has been silent on the issue.
"Many women are kept in prison because the government is very scared of the public attention," Sadr said. "One of my clients has been there for eight years and her family have abandoned her."
Publicity helps. "The only reason the Iranian government has not carried out stoning sentences on all these people is that it is afraid of Iranian public reaction and international attention," said Sadr.
The embassy said in its statement: "This kind of punishment has rarely been implemented in Iran" and condemned media reports about the case as unreliable.
The 12 women on death row also include Mariam Ghorbanzadeh, 25, Iran Iskandari, 31, Kheyrieh Valania, 42, Sarimeh Sajadi, 30, Kobra Babaei, and Afsaneh R.
Mohammadi Ashtiani was convicted of having "illicit relationships" with two men. But her lawyer, Mohammad Mostafaie, insisted there was no evidence to justify an adultery conviction. As a member of Iran's Azerbaijani minority, her inability to understand the language of the court also prevented a fair trial, he said.
William Hague, the foreign secretary, added his voice to the outrage today, condemning a "medieval punishment that has no place in the modern world". He added: "The continued use of such a punishment in Iran demonstrates a blatant disregard for international human rights commitments ... as well as the interests of its people. I call on Iran to put an immediate stay to the execution of Ms Mohammadi Ashtiani on the charge of adultery and review the process by which she was tried, and her sentence.
"She has already faced the disgraceful punishment of 99 lashes for adultery; her execution would disgust and appal the watching world."
Actors Emma Thompson, Colin Firth, Juliette Binoche and playwright Sir David Hare have backed the appeal to halt the stoning. John Bercow, the Commons speaker, made a rare statement condemning a "horrific" matter and a "grotesque abuse" of human rights.
The International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, to which Iran is a party, requires states that have not yet abolished the death penalty to restrict its use to the "most serious crimes". The United Nations general assembly has called on all states to introduce a moratorium on the use of the death penalty.
Saeed Kamali Dehghan and Ian Black Guardian.co.uk
An Iranian woman at a protest in Brussels highlights the barbarity of death by stoning, in which women are buried up to their necks in front of a crowd of volunteers and killed in a hail of rocks. Photograph: Thierry Roge/Reuters.
Twelve Iranian women and three men are on death row awaiting execution by stoning despite an apparent last-minute reprieve for a mother of two who had been facing the horrific sentence after being convicted of adultery.
Human rights groups and activists welcomed a wave of international publicity and protests over the case of Sakineh Mohammadi Ashtiani, 43, who was awaiting execution in the western Iranian town of Tabriz after what her lawyer called an unjust trial and a sham conviction.
The Iranian embassy in London said in a statement that "according to information from the relevant judicial authorities" the stoning would not go ahead. If confirmed it would be an victory for a brief but intense campaign that was first highlighted by the Guardian last week.
However, there are still concerns over her plight. In a previous case a prisoner who was to be stoned was instead executed by hanging.
Speaking to this paper Mohammadi Ashtiani's son Sajad, said his mother – whom he had spoken to by telephone – believed the pressure on her behalf might succeed, although he had not heard of any reprieve. "The campaign for her release is going very well," he said. "They gave me permission to talk to her and she was very thankful to the people of the world for supporting her. I'm very happy that so many have joined me in protesting this injustice. It was the first time in years I heard any hope in my mother's voice."
Without a reprieve, Mohammadi Ashtiani would have been buried up to her neck before being pelted with stones large enough to cause pain but not so large as to kill her immediately. Iran routinely censors information about executions, but all the 12 other women on death row have been convicted on adultery charges, as has one of the three men.
Azar Bagheri, 19, was arrested when she was 15 after her husband accused her of seeing another man. She has been subjected to mock stonings along with partial burial in the ground.
Ashraf Kalhori, 40, also sentenced to death by stoning, was forced to confess to a relationship with her husband's murderer, and has been in Tehran's Evin prison for seven years, according to her lawyer.
In one especially gruesome case, Maryam Ayubi, another alleged adulteress, fainted while being ritually washed before her execution in 2001 and was stoned to death while strapped to a stretcher. Outrage over that led to the marking of 11 July as the annual international day against stoning – which will see demonstrations at the Iran embassy in London.
Iranian activists say the tragedy is that the families of those sentenced to death often ignore them. "It doesn't matter to them whether the charge of adultery is true or not because the honour of the family is tainted so they forget the poor creature awaiting death," said Soheila Vahdati, who is now based in California.
"It's not possible to talk about these prisoners in public because their families don't want their names mentioned or their pictures published. Their families don't want to defend them neither. Mohammadi Ashtiani's case is amazing because her children are campaigning for her courageously and said that their mother is innocent."
Shammameh Ghorbani, who is awaiting stoning, begged not to be freed from prison because she feared being killed by her family.
Shadi Sadr, an acclaimed Iranian lawyer, said it was hard to know exactly how many people were still facing stoning. Last year the Iranian parliament passed a law banning it, but the powerful Guardian Council has been silent on the issue.
"Many women are kept in prison because the government is very scared of the public attention," Sadr said. "One of my clients has been there for eight years and her family have abandoned her."
Publicity helps. "The only reason the Iranian government has not carried out stoning sentences on all these people is that it is afraid of Iranian public reaction and international attention," said Sadr.
The embassy said in its statement: "This kind of punishment has rarely been implemented in Iran" and condemned media reports about the case as unreliable.
The 12 women on death row also include Mariam Ghorbanzadeh, 25, Iran Iskandari, 31, Kheyrieh Valania, 42, Sarimeh Sajadi, 30, Kobra Babaei, and Afsaneh R.
Mohammadi Ashtiani was convicted of having "illicit relationships" with two men. But her lawyer, Mohammad Mostafaie, insisted there was no evidence to justify an adultery conviction. As a member of Iran's Azerbaijani minority, her inability to understand the language of the court also prevented a fair trial, he said.
William Hague, the foreign secretary, added his voice to the outrage today, condemning a "medieval punishment that has no place in the modern world". He added: "The continued use of such a punishment in Iran demonstrates a blatant disregard for international human rights commitments ... as well as the interests of its people. I call on Iran to put an immediate stay to the execution of Ms Mohammadi Ashtiani on the charge of adultery and review the process by which she was tried, and her sentence.
"She has already faced the disgraceful punishment of 99 lashes for adultery; her execution would disgust and appal the watching world."
Actors Emma Thompson, Colin Firth, Juliette Binoche and playwright Sir David Hare have backed the appeal to halt the stoning. John Bercow, the Commons speaker, made a rare statement condemning a "horrific" matter and a "grotesque abuse" of human rights.
The International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, to which Iran is a party, requires states that have not yet abolished the death penalty to restrict its use to the "most serious crimes". The United Nations general assembly has called on all states to introduce a moratorium on the use of the death penalty.
Sharia in Europe
A few words about the sharia laws will soon become a European problem too. There is no stopping this pest unless we're being successful NOW!
Please sign petition at: www.shariapetition.com
Thank You!
Please sign petition at: www.shariapetition.com
Thank You!
Fears TV confession can expedite execution
Fears TV confession can expedite execution
(Translation by Google)
The reason for concern is the TV confession to the doomed Sakineh Mohammadi Ashtiani.
Human rights organization parts thus concern to Ashtianis lawyer, Mohammad Mostafaei, who is in exile in Norway.
Mostafei Thursday said that such televised confessions used by the Iranian authorities to justify executions.
Wednesday this week sent the Iranian television a 'interview' with the Ashtiani, where she confesses both adultery and complicity in the murder of her husband. The woman is wearing the full chador garment, and it is therefore impossible to determine her identity with certainty.
According to 43 years old Ashtianis second lawyer, Houtan Kian, told Human Rights Watch that Iran's Supreme Court will pronounce the final verdict on the case within a few days.
(Translation by Google)
Human Rights Watch fears the execution if Iranian Sakineh Mohammadi Ashtiani is imminent.
The reason for concern is the TV confession to the doomed Sakineh Mohammadi Ashtiani.
Human rights organization parts thus concern to Ashtianis lawyer, Mohammad Mostafaei, who is in exile in Norway.
Mostafei Thursday said that such televised confessions used by the Iranian authorities to justify executions.
Wednesday this week sent the Iranian television a 'interview' with the Ashtiani, where she confesses both adultery and complicity in the murder of her husband. The woman is wearing the full chador garment, and it is therefore impossible to determine her identity with certainty.
According to 43 years old Ashtianis second lawyer, Houtan Kian, told Human Rights Watch that Iran's Supreme Court will pronounce the final verdict on the case within a few days.
Exiled Iranian human rights lawyer speaks out
Oslo, Norway (CNN) -- To escape Iran, Mohammad Mostafaei traveled for more then 10 hours on foot and on horseback over the mountains, crossing the border illegally into Turkey.
Soon afterwards, he ended up in a detention center for illegal immigrants in Istanbul, where he was incarcerated for nearly a week.
After several surreal and sometimes dangerous weeks, Mostafaei's journey appears to finally be over. He now strolls the tidy, rain-soaked streets of Norway's capital, safe from the Iranian security forces who he claims targeted him. But Mostafaei is far from at ease.
"I don't like to be a refugee, nor do I like to work abroad," he says. "My love is to remain in Iran and help people who somehow have been oppressed whether by society or by the law or by the judicial system. But regrettably, I became a victim."
Mostafaei is a human rights lawyer. He specializes in defending Iranians under the age of 18, who have been sentenced to death for crimes ranging from murder to sodomy.
Iran ranks second in the world after China for annual executions of prisoners. But according to Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch, Iran leads the world for the number of death sentences carried out against juvenile defendants. Human Rights Watch reports that since 2005, the Iranian judiciary has executed dozens of Iranians who were convicted of crimes committed below the age of 18.
"I have worked and handled 40 cases so far and out of these, thank God, 18 were saved," Mostafaei says. "Regrettably four were hanged. The rest need help."
In 2008 and 2009, four of Mostafaei's juvenile clients were executed. They include Delara Darabi, who was hung on May 1st 2009 for a murder allegedly committed when she was 17 years old and Behnoud Shojai, executed on October 11th, 2009 for stabbing another teenager to death when he was 17 years old.
Human rights groups point out that Iran is a signatory to the UN's International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and the Convention on the Rights of the Child, both of which prohibit executions for crimes committed under the age of 18.
"These are arbitrary executions," argues Mostafaei.
For his criticism of this policy, the lawyer says authorities prevented him from traveling outside of Iran for a seven-month period.
"I was contacted several times and warned to watch out. Sometimes I saw that I was being followed," he adds. "My home phones and my offices phones were monitored."
The defense attorney appeared to have finally crossed a red line due to his outspoken defense of Sakine Mohammadi Ashtiani, the 43-year-old mother of two who was sentenced to death by stoning after being convicted of committing adultery. International uproar over the case has been a source of embarrassment for the Islamic Republic.
Activists around the world have staged protests demanding Iranian authorities commute the sentence. More recently, the president of Brazil, whose government recently broke with Western countries and voted in the United Nations Security Council against imposing a fresh round of sanctions against Iran over its nuclear program, made a public offer of asylum to help Ashtiani escape the death sentence. Tehran rejected that offer.
On July 24th, Mostafaei says he was brought into Tehran's Evin prison for hours of interrogation. He was later released, only to discover that, in his absence, security forces had raided his office and detained his wife and brother-in-law.
"The hostage-taking led me to leave the country," Mostafaei says.
When Mostafaei was later detained after smuggling himself into Turkey, the Norwegian government intervened at the highest level to have him released.
"There is a courageous man who raises cases-- difficult cases-- which the authorities don't like and he sees himself in a position where he has to flee across a mountain. He sees his wife imprisoned. Well, I think we should wake up and speak out," said Jonas Gahr Støre, the Foreign Minister of Norway, in an interview with CNN.
Norway's top diplomat says, on principle, his government opposes the death penalty.
"The death penalty against juvenile people is an especially bad thing," says Støre. "Iran being among the countries with the most such cases."
Barely a week after arriving in Oslo under Norwegian government protection, Mostafaei appears to be very much on an emotional roller coaster, swinging rapidly from elation to despair.
He relishes the chance to focus attention on Iran's human rights record, which he argues is often over-shadowed by international concern over Iran's nuclear program.
"What matters more inside Iran are human rights issues," Mostafaei says. "Lack of freedom of speech, lack of freedom of thought, the newspapers are not free, the students are not free, the [political] parties are not free...human rights issues in the prosecutors' offices are far more important than issues of world nuclear energy."
But Mostafaei's new international platform for publicity has come at considerable personal cost.
On August 7th, Mostafaei's wife Fereshteh Halimi was released on bail after spending 13 days in solitary confinement.
"When they found that my husband was out of Iran and they couldn't reach him and I wouldn't be a good hostage any more, that's when they released me," Halimi said in a phone interview with CNN last week. Halimi's father and brother were also briefly detained, but later released after posting bail for the equivalent of tens of thousands of dollars. All three now await trial in Tehran.
"I can imagine that with him being here and the family being there he [Mostafei] feels concerned," says Norwegian foreign minister Støre. "And knowing the track record of the Iranian regime when it comes to people like that I don't question his concern."
"I hope Iran will get better in the future," Mostafaei said, during a rainy walk along a waterfront boardwalk in Oslo. "But I don't know when. Maybe five years, ten years, I don't know."
Then, his mood momentarily brightened as he pointed across Oslo's harbor, exclaiming "very beautiful."
Soon afterwards, he ended up in a detention center for illegal immigrants in Istanbul, where he was incarcerated for nearly a week.
After several surreal and sometimes dangerous weeks, Mostafaei's journey appears to finally be over. He now strolls the tidy, rain-soaked streets of Norway's capital, safe from the Iranian security forces who he claims targeted him. But Mostafaei is far from at ease.
"I don't like to be a refugee, nor do I like to work abroad," he says. "My love is to remain in Iran and help people who somehow have been oppressed whether by society or by the law or by the judicial system. But regrettably, I became a victim."
Mostafaei is a human rights lawyer. He specializes in defending Iranians under the age of 18, who have been sentenced to death for crimes ranging from murder to sodomy.
"I have worked and handled 40 cases so far and out of these, thank God, 18 were saved," Mostafaei says. "Regrettably four were hanged. The rest need help."
In 2008 and 2009, four of Mostafaei's juvenile clients were executed. They include Delara Darabi, who was hung on May 1st 2009 for a murder allegedly committed when she was 17 years old and Behnoud Shojai, executed on October 11th, 2009 for stabbing another teenager to death when he was 17 years old.
Human rights groups point out that Iran is a signatory to the UN's International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and the Convention on the Rights of the Child, both of which prohibit executions for crimes committed under the age of 18.
"These are arbitrary executions," argues Mostafaei.
For his criticism of this policy, the lawyer says authorities prevented him from traveling outside of Iran for a seven-month period.
"I was contacted several times and warned to watch out. Sometimes I saw that I was being followed," he adds. "My home phones and my offices phones were monitored."
The defense attorney appeared to have finally crossed a red line due to his outspoken defense of Sakine Mohammadi Ashtiani, the 43-year-old mother of two who was sentenced to death by stoning after being convicted of committing adultery. International uproar over the case has been a source of embarrassment for the Islamic Republic.
Activists around the world have staged protests demanding Iranian authorities commute the sentence. More recently, the president of Brazil, whose government recently broke with Western countries and voted in the United Nations Security Council against imposing a fresh round of sanctions against Iran over its nuclear program, made a public offer of asylum to help Ashtiani escape the death sentence. Tehran rejected that offer.
On July 24th, Mostafaei says he was brought into Tehran's Evin prison for hours of interrogation. He was later released, only to discover that, in his absence, security forces had raided his office and detained his wife and brother-in-law.
"The hostage-taking led me to leave the country," Mostafaei says.
When Mostafaei was later detained after smuggling himself into Turkey, the Norwegian government intervened at the highest level to have him released.
"There is a courageous man who raises cases-- difficult cases-- which the authorities don't like and he sees himself in a position where he has to flee across a mountain. He sees his wife imprisoned. Well, I think we should wake up and speak out," said Jonas Gahr Støre, the Foreign Minister of Norway, in an interview with CNN.
There is a courageous man who raises cases -- difficult cases -- which the authorities don't like.
--Jonas Gahr Stoere, Norwegian Foreign Minister
--Jonas Gahr Stoere, Norwegian Foreign Minister
"The death penalty against juvenile people is an especially bad thing," says Støre. "Iran being among the countries with the most such cases."
Barely a week after arriving in Oslo under Norwegian government protection, Mostafaei appears to be very much on an emotional roller coaster, swinging rapidly from elation to despair.
He relishes the chance to focus attention on Iran's human rights record, which he argues is often over-shadowed by international concern over Iran's nuclear program.
"What matters more inside Iran are human rights issues," Mostafaei says. "Lack of freedom of speech, lack of freedom of thought, the newspapers are not free, the students are not free, the [political] parties are not free...human rights issues in the prosecutors' offices are far more important than issues of world nuclear energy."
But Mostafaei's new international platform for publicity has come at considerable personal cost.
On August 7th, Mostafaei's wife Fereshteh Halimi was released on bail after spending 13 days in solitary confinement.
"When they found that my husband was out of Iran and they couldn't reach him and I wouldn't be a good hostage any more, that's when they released me," Halimi said in a phone interview with CNN last week. Halimi's father and brother were also briefly detained, but later released after posting bail for the equivalent of tens of thousands of dollars. All three now await trial in Tehran.
"I can imagine that with him being here and the family being there he [Mostafei] feels concerned," says Norwegian foreign minister Støre. "And knowing the track record of the Iranian regime when it comes to people like that I don't question his concern."
"I hope Iran will get better in the future," Mostafaei said, during a rainy walk along a waterfront boardwalk in Oslo. "But I don't know when. Maybe five years, ten years, I don't know."
Then, his mood momentarily brightened as he pointed across Oslo's harbor, exclaiming "very beautiful."
A rainbow had appeared over the water... a much-needed sign of hope, perhaps, for a man who has lost his job, his country, and now faces prolonged separation from his wife and daughter.
Sajad Qaderzadeh’s Letter (Sakineh Mohammadi Ashtiani’s son) to the United Nations: “Our Mother is not a murderer, Do not let her be executed”
"Our Mother is not a murderer, Do not let her be executed”
Our Mother is not a murderer
Do not let her be executed
For five years we have endured the nightmare of our mother being stoned.
There has been news of our mother’s crime- adultery, everywhere and that she would be stoned. This frightful word has been continuously repeated in connection with our Mother. This has made us cry day after day and wonder how we would live without her.
Time after time we tried to help our Mother. We searched different avenues. We found people who we thought might be able to help us. We wrote letters saying, ‘do not let the pain of our Mother’s death add to our already painful lives’. I do not know why nobody listened. Perhaps there are people who enjoy seeing our Mother suffer and us having dark nightmares.
Two months ago we heard that all possibilities were closed and our Mother may be stoned soon. Our last option was to ask people of the world to help us. Now that many people internationally talk about our Mother and her fate, this has given us positive support. Suddenly the situation has changed. Our Mother’s crime is murder now and death sentence.
This is not true. Whatever she says now it is because of being captured and the nightmare of stoning and the death sentence.
This is not acceptable.
We know that our Mother is not a murderer. Our Father’s murder file has been looked into and someone else has confessed. The file is closed now; all the files are there to be seen.
Now, how is it that the government sources want to open the files and judge our Mother a murderer. It looks as thought to be fair to our Father they want to kill our Mother. What sort of justice is this?
In order to look at this situation impartially, we ask the United Nations to send a committee to Iran to look at all these questions.
Sajad Qader Zadeh (Sakineh Mohammadi Ashtiani’s son).
Publication of international committee against stoning and international committee against execution
Our Mother is not a murderer
Do not let her be executed
For five years we have endured the nightmare of our mother being stoned.
There has been news of our mother’s crime- adultery, everywhere and that she would be stoned. This frightful word has been continuously repeated in connection with our Mother. This has made us cry day after day and wonder how we would live without her.
Time after time we tried to help our Mother. We searched different avenues. We found people who we thought might be able to help us. We wrote letters saying, ‘do not let the pain of our Mother’s death add to our already painful lives’. I do not know why nobody listened. Perhaps there are people who enjoy seeing our Mother suffer and us having dark nightmares.
Two months ago we heard that all possibilities were closed and our Mother may be stoned soon. Our last option was to ask people of the world to help us. Now that many people internationally talk about our Mother and her fate, this has given us positive support. Suddenly the situation has changed. Our Mother’s crime is murder now and death sentence.
This is not true. Whatever she says now it is because of being captured and the nightmare of stoning and the death sentence.
This is not acceptable.
We know that our Mother is not a murderer. Our Father’s murder file has been looked into and someone else has confessed. The file is closed now; all the files are there to be seen.
Now, how is it that the government sources want to open the files and judge our Mother a murderer. It looks as thought to be fair to our Father they want to kill our Mother. What sort of justice is this?
In order to look at this situation impartially, we ask the United Nations to send a committee to Iran to look at all these questions.
Sajad Qader Zadeh (Sakineh Mohammadi Ashtiani’s son).
Publication of international committee against stoning and international committee against execution
Zahra’s message to Sakine’s children
About Zahra’s letter, Zahra’s pain!
It was a year and half ago when Zahra called me and cried: “Mina, they want to hang my mother in two days!” I asked her to calm down and tell me what was happening. She said, “They have told us that we can meet our mother for the last time.”
We had endured to save Fatemeh’s life for a number of years; a number of years that I knew Zahra and her sister.
In the last days of our campaign to save Fatemeh’s life, we broadcast a number of programs from “The New Channel TV.” Around midnight on November 25, 2008, the International Day against Violence, while staying in a hotel somewhere in Germany to deliver a speech, I was following the two girls standing outside the notorious Evin prison; they were live, online. You could still see disbelief in their eyes: on the other side of the walls, the hangmen were preparing to kill their mother. Zahra was telling me that “there is a crowd of over 100 people gathering there… they are going to execute many people tonight,” she said. Miles away that midnight, from Germany, I could hear the cries, the calls for mercy. I could feel the anxiety.
Zahra and Farzaneh were shaking in fear. Zahra said that after killing ten people, the hangmen opened the gates and told the crowd: “It is finished now. You can collect the bodies at 10am!” A day later when I called her, she said, “Mina! I am with my mother!”
She couldn’t leave her mother alone in the graveyard.
Mina Ahadi
August 10, 2010
In memory of those whose innocent cries were unjustly suffocated in their throats by the noose called Islam.
Hello friends,
I am begotten of justified injustice in Iran. Here in the cage of my chest, love of life is a captured bird in the narrowest and most excruciating deathtrap; here in this body life is on its deathbed, unattended, dying in agony, whipped by the crooked holy men of justice of Iran. When you cannot find hope in this vast land of hopelessness, where can you take refuge? Yet I tell myself every life taken by this deadlystorm of injustice rises to the height of the sky, and falls down in rivulets to gently embrace the thirsty river beds.
Hello dearest Sajjad and Saideh,
I am Zahra, daughter of Fatemeh Haghighat-Pazhuh. Probably you have heard her name. You and I know each other for we share the same pain. Yes, I know your pain. I know your pain before you did: it is ten years that I bear this sorrow.
Dear ones,
I have wept with the heartbreaking cry of all prisoners under Ghesas and I will cry for each and every one who is to be taken to the gallows. Distance doesn’t blunt this cutting edge ; it is as if I know you and your mother, who are, like my innocent mother and I, trapped in the talons of these unjust men of justice in Iran. Not a day passes that I don’t wish to hear of the freedom and the exoneration of Sakineh and all those others like her on death row.
Dear ones,
I know your moments are filled with anxiety; I am familiar with your pain. Not only familiar – I am branded with the pain of the children, innocent and pure children of those sentenced to Ghesas, now and as long as I live. I know that a wish for their freedom in our society is a hollow gift to offer, yet I still wish for the freedom of all Sakinehs, Kobras, Fatemahs and Shahlas. Yes, when I think of a hard and merciless noose around my mother’s neck, I wish for freedom of all imprisoned mothers.
My dear ones,You and I bear a pain so heavy that it cannot be absorbed even by the endless emptiness of the Kavir. I wish there were a place to run to, a haven from the injustice of this beautiful land which, in the eyes of the world, is deflowered, smeared, poisoned by those men of evil. I hope in that short time left to save your mother, she finds freedom through the cries of all freedom-loving people who have rushed in to hold your hands.
I did not intend to add to your sorrow; I did not wish you to see me cry in my loneliness; I did not want you – who have your own unbearable pain – to cry for me too. I wish I was with you to give you my sisterly love, to show you our beautiful Sakineh’s star in the sky blinking at us. I wish the emptiness of my silenced heart would soon be filled with the cheerful cries of your mother’s freedom, filled with a life anew. I wish that the darkness could never feast on blown-out candles. It is true that our lonely cries do not reach far, but it is also true that injustice does not reign for ever.
It is more than a year that my innocent mother’s life was extinguished ; then there were Delaras and other women who flew from this painful cage; but this time with entirety of humbleness I ask of those who have heard the plight of Zahras, Sajjads and Saidehs to behold our broken hearts and extend their hands to our shaking hands which do not reach far enough in this land of imprisoned justice. Rush to spare Saideh and Sajjad from the same infinite pain of losing their mother the way my sister and I did.
Only a savage storm breaks the life inside of a branch, nothing else.
Be the morning breeze, embrace, and waken to life.
Zahra Hghyghat- Pazhuh
17 Mordad 89
8 August 2010
Note that this is a somewhat free translation, to capture the essence of the letter.
Translation: Ahmad Fatemi begin_of_the_skype_highlighting end_of_the_skype_highlighting
Editing: Maria Rohaly begin_of_the_skype_highlighting end_of_the_skype_highlighting
Distributed by the International Committee against Execution
It was a year and half ago when Zahra called me and cried: “Mina, they want to hang my mother in two days!” I asked her to calm down and tell me what was happening. She said, “They have told us that we can meet our mother for the last time.”
We had endured to save Fatemeh’s life for a number of years; a number of years that I knew Zahra and her sister.
In the last days of our campaign to save Fatemeh’s life, we broadcast a number of programs from “The New Channel TV.” Around midnight on November 25, 2008, the International Day against Violence, while staying in a hotel somewhere in Germany to deliver a speech, I was following the two girls standing outside the notorious Evin prison; they were live, online. You could still see disbelief in their eyes: on the other side of the walls, the hangmen were preparing to kill their mother. Zahra was telling me that “there is a crowd of over 100 people gathering there… they are going to execute many people tonight,” she said. Miles away that midnight, from Germany, I could hear the cries, the calls for mercy. I could feel the anxiety.
Zahra and Farzaneh were shaking in fear. Zahra said that after killing ten people, the hangmen opened the gates and told the crowd: “It is finished now. You can collect the bodies at 10am!” A day later when I called her, she said, “Mina! I am with my mother!”
She couldn’t leave her mother alone in the graveyard.
Mina Ahadi
August 10, 2010
In memory of those whose innocent cries were unjustly suffocated in their throats by the noose called Islam.
Hello friends,
I am begotten of justified injustice in Iran. Here in the cage of my chest, love of life is a captured bird in the narrowest and most excruciating deathtrap; here in this body life is on its deathbed, unattended, dying in agony, whipped by the crooked holy men of justice of Iran. When you cannot find hope in this vast land of hopelessness, where can you take refuge? Yet I tell myself every life taken by this deadlystorm of injustice rises to the height of the sky, and falls down in rivulets to gently embrace the thirsty river beds.
Hello dearest Sajjad and Saideh,
I am Zahra, daughter of Fatemeh Haghighat-Pazhuh. Probably you have heard her name. You and I know each other for we share the same pain. Yes, I know your pain. I know your pain before you did: it is ten years that I bear this sorrow.
Dear ones,
I have wept with the heartbreaking cry of all prisoners under Ghesas and I will cry for each and every one who is to be taken to the gallows. Distance doesn’t blunt this cutting edge ; it is as if I know you and your mother, who are, like my innocent mother and I, trapped in the talons of these unjust men of justice in Iran. Not a day passes that I don’t wish to hear of the freedom and the exoneration of Sakineh and all those others like her on death row.
Dear ones,
I know your moments are filled with anxiety; I am familiar with your pain. Not only familiar – I am branded with the pain of the children, innocent and pure children of those sentenced to Ghesas, now and as long as I live. I know that a wish for their freedom in our society is a hollow gift to offer, yet I still wish for the freedom of all Sakinehs, Kobras, Fatemahs and Shahlas. Yes, when I think of a hard and merciless noose around my mother’s neck, I wish for freedom of all imprisoned mothers.
My dear ones,You and I bear a pain so heavy that it cannot be absorbed even by the endless emptiness of the Kavir. I wish there were a place to run to, a haven from the injustice of this beautiful land which, in the eyes of the world, is deflowered, smeared, poisoned by those men of evil. I hope in that short time left to save your mother, she finds freedom through the cries of all freedom-loving people who have rushed in to hold your hands.
I did not intend to add to your sorrow; I did not wish you to see me cry in my loneliness; I did not want you – who have your own unbearable pain – to cry for me too. I wish I was with you to give you my sisterly love, to show you our beautiful Sakineh’s star in the sky blinking at us. I wish the emptiness of my silenced heart would soon be filled with the cheerful cries of your mother’s freedom, filled with a life anew. I wish that the darkness could never feast on blown-out candles. It is true that our lonely cries do not reach far, but it is also true that injustice does not reign for ever.
It is more than a year that my innocent mother’s life was extinguished ; then there were Delaras and other women who flew from this painful cage; but this time with entirety of humbleness I ask of those who have heard the plight of Zahras, Sajjads and Saidehs to behold our broken hearts and extend their hands to our shaking hands which do not reach far enough in this land of imprisoned justice. Rush to spare Saideh and Sajjad from the same infinite pain of losing their mother the way my sister and I did.
Only a savage storm breaks the life inside of a branch, nothing else.
Be the morning breeze, embrace, and waken to life.
Zahra Hghyghat- Pazhuh
17 Mordad 89
8 August 2010
Note that this is a somewhat free translation, to capture the essence of the letter.
Translation: Ahmad Fatemi begin_of_the_skype_highlighting end_of_the_skype_highlighting
Editing: Maria Rohaly begin_of_the_skype_highlighting end_of_the_skype_highlighting
Distributed by the International Committee against Execution
The regime in Iran forces Sakineh Ashtiani to testify against herself on state-run TV
August 11, 2010
The regime in Iran forces Sakineh Ashtiani to testify against herself on state-run TV
According to the latest news received by International Committee Against Stoning the regime in Iran has broadcast an interview with Sakineh Ashtiani, sentenced to be either stoned or hanged by the regime. In the interview she speaks against her lawyer, Mohammad Mostafai, and against the international campaign to save her. The report goes on to say that the state-run TV has further put together interviews with a few inhabitants of Oskoo, Azerbaijan, Sakineh’s native town, in which they express their inclination to see her executed.
This latest episode of TV serial, ‘confession’, in Iran is, as usual, nothing but a farce to the eyes of the people in Iran as well as to all those around the world familiar with the regime and the workings of its media. The fact of the matter is that the Islamic regime is under the illusion that it can, by employing such scandalous means, reduce the pressure of the worldwide, snowballing campaign against it, and thus prepare the ground for sakineh’s execution. All it has accomplished, however, is coercing a victim, for four years held in captivity and relinquished to the incubus of being stoned to death, to appear on state TV and make fitting ‘confessions’!
We maintain it is evident that such masquerades have not only been already revoltingly exposed to the human mind around the world but also long since managed to bring up only the innermost humane abhorrence and anger in it. And worldwide abhorrence and anger cannot help but deepen and widen in this case as long as committing and masquerading state crime continues in general in Iran.
International Committee Against Stoning (ICAS) calls on all individual and organized defenders of the rights of human beings to emphatically condemn the Islamic regime’s inhuman treatment of Sakineh Ashtiani, and to proactively rise up to her defense.
In summary, we call on one and all of civilized humanity to stand up to the latest crime committed by regime against the person as well as the human rights of Sakineh, and remain absolutely steadfast in their defense of her.
Mina Ahadi
Spokesperson
International Committee Against Stoning (www.stopstonningnow.com)
International Committee Against Execution (www.notonemoreexecution.org)
Email: minaahadi@aol.com
Tel: 0049 (0) 1775692413
PS 1- Sakineh Ashtina’s TV interview as posted on Tabnak website: http://tabnak.com/cache/videopage.php
2- CNN report on Ashtiani’s appearance on state-run Iranian TV: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i007LQAuJDo
The regime in Iran forces Sakineh Ashtiani to testify against herself on state-run TV
According to the latest news received by International Committee Against Stoning the regime in Iran has broadcast an interview with Sakineh Ashtiani, sentenced to be either stoned or hanged by the regime. In the interview she speaks against her lawyer, Mohammad Mostafai, and against the international campaign to save her. The report goes on to say that the state-run TV has further put together interviews with a few inhabitants of Oskoo, Azerbaijan, Sakineh’s native town, in which they express their inclination to see her executed.
This latest episode of TV serial, ‘confession’, in Iran is, as usual, nothing but a farce to the eyes of the people in Iran as well as to all those around the world familiar with the regime and the workings of its media. The fact of the matter is that the Islamic regime is under the illusion that it can, by employing such scandalous means, reduce the pressure of the worldwide, snowballing campaign against it, and thus prepare the ground for sakineh’s execution. All it has accomplished, however, is coercing a victim, for four years held in captivity and relinquished to the incubus of being stoned to death, to appear on state TV and make fitting ‘confessions’!
We maintain it is evident that such masquerades have not only been already revoltingly exposed to the human mind around the world but also long since managed to bring up only the innermost humane abhorrence and anger in it. And worldwide abhorrence and anger cannot help but deepen and widen in this case as long as committing and masquerading state crime continues in general in Iran.
International Committee Against Stoning (ICAS) calls on all individual and organized defenders of the rights of human beings to emphatically condemn the Islamic regime’s inhuman treatment of Sakineh Ashtiani, and to proactively rise up to her defense.
In summary, we call on one and all of civilized humanity to stand up to the latest crime committed by regime against the person as well as the human rights of Sakineh, and remain absolutely steadfast in their defense of her.
Mina Ahadi
Spokesperson
International Committee Against Stoning (www.stopstonningnow.com)
International Committee Against Execution (www.notonemoreexecution.org)
Email: minaahadi@aol.com
Tel: 0049 (0) 1775692413
PS 1- Sakineh Ashtina’s TV interview as posted on Tabnak website: http://tabnak.com/cache/videopage.php
2- CNN report on Ashtiani’s appearance on state-run Iranian TV: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i007LQAuJDo
Mina Ahadi , Letter to Ban Ki- Moon
Dear Mr. Ban Ki-Moon,
Recently we have received very disturbing news from Iran, concerning the case of Sakineh Mohammadi-Ashtiaani. The recent news indicate that Sakineh, a 43 year old woman imprisoned in Tabriz who has been sentenced to death by stoning by the Islamic Republic of Iran, is now in serious danger of execution by hanging. For the past three years I have actively been involved in Sakineh’s case, trying to save her from the death penalty she has been condemned to, and I am therefore aware of all the details of this case.
I am appealing to you to intervene immediately in order to help to save Sakineh’s life. First Sakineh was sentenced to 99 lashes and then to stoning by the Province Court of Tabriz (capital city of Eastern Azerbaijan) accused of ‘adultery’ and the sentence had subsequently been confirmed by the Supreme Court in Tehran. There is another ongoing investigation concerning the murder of Sakineh Mohammadi Ashtiani’s husband, and according to the documents of the regime’s own courts, Ashtiani has been deemed innocent and another person convicted for the murder of Sakineh’s husband; this accused person has confessed the murder and has already been arrested and imprisoned.
Now, thanks to Sakineh Mohammadi’s children attempt to help save their mother’s life and the powerful international pressure, the regime is trumping up charges against Sakineh, accusing her of murdering her husband.
On Wednesday 11th August 2010 Sakineh was shown on a state-run TV program to make a public confession. The TV program is called “20:30” and is the Islamic Republic’s most broadcasted program. During the emission Mrs. Ashtiani was reading from a paper in her hands and her speech was very unclear. During the program, they read a text accusing Mrs. Ashtiani of being involved in the murder of her husband, which is a lie. The fact that she has been sentenced to death by lapidating was not mentioned, nor discussed in this program The significance of this TV program is that the Islamic government is attempting to legitimate before the public opinion their decision and we fear that the death sentence will take place very soon..
We would like to inform you that there is no civil accusation against Mrs. Ashtiani. It is the Tabriz authorities and government officials that are acting as prosecutors, and for some reason they want to kill her at all costs.
It is not the first time that Iran has put an innocent victim on a televised program and killed them after, based of their forced confessions – unfortunately it has happened many times.
Propaganda against Neda Agha Soltan was spread after her death by the Islamic Republic, accusing her family of planning her death; and there was a campaign against Taraneh Mousavi, accusing her family of her death, while it was well known that she had been raped and murdered in prison under the responsibility of the Islamic Republic.
These are only a few examples of the “justice methods” used by the Islamic Republic.
I want to raise the warning about the fact that we fear that the Islamic regime intends to execute Sakineh immediately.
We send you enclosed to this letter all documents that prove that the case of Sakineh had once been reviewed in the courts of Azerbaijan and she was not convicted for the murder of her husband.
On behalf of Sakiness’ children I appeal to you for a delegation to be sent to Iran in order to properly investigate all these allegations and re-review the case of Sakineh immediately.
Mr. Ban Ki-Moon! Sakineh’s case is just one example of the hundreds of injustices that are happening in Iran.
Today, there are 170 people sentenced to death in the Tabriz prison. Four of them are women who are sentenced to stoning. There are dozens of imprisoned homosexuals in the Tabriz prison. Among those detained there is a 15 year old boy who is also sentenced to death. His crime is that he is gay. He shares the cell with adult men who are criminals. He has written to us and called for help. These atrocities occur daily in Iran. There is an urgent need for a broad global action.
According to our sources in Iran, all these people are in great danger. Yet once again I urge you to act immediately to save Sakineh´s life and all other victims of the Islamic Regime.
Thanks and regards,
Mina Ahadi, Spokesperson
International Committee Against Execution
International Committee Against Stoning
2010-08-13
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