|
AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL OUTRAGED AT REPORTED
EXECUTION OF A 16 YEAR OLD GIRL
August
23, 2004 - (Amnesty International) Amnesty International today expressed
its outrage at the reported execution of a girl who is believed
to be 16 years old, Ateqeh Rajabi, in Neka in the northern Iranian
province of Mazandaran, on 15 August, for "acts incompatible
with chastity" (amal-e manafe-ye ofat). Ateqeh Rajabi
was reportedly publicly hanged on a street in the city centre of
Neka.
Amnesty
International is alarmed that this execution was carried out despite
reports that Ateqeh Rajabi was not believed to be mentally competent,
and that she reportedly did not have access to a lawyer at any stage.
The execution of Ateqeh Rajabi is the tenth execution of a child
offender in Iran recorded by Amnesty International since 1990. Amnesty
International has urged Irans judicial authorities to halt
further executions of child offenders - people who were under 18
years old at the time of the offence. This is to bring Irans
law and practice in line with requirements of international human
rights law.
A bill to raise the minimum age for execution to 18 was reportedly
under consideration by parliament in December 2003. However, the
bill is not believed to have been ratified by the Guardian Council,
Irans highest legislative body.
Amnesty
International believes that the execution of Ateqeh Rajabi underlines
the urgent necessity that Iran pass legislation removing provision
for the execution of child offenders, thereby preventing further
execution of child offenders, and bringing Iran into line with its
obligations under international law.
Further, the organization is urging the authorities to clarify whether
Ateqel Rajabi had legal representation and whether a legally approved
doctor deemed her psychologically fit to stand trial.
Background
According
to report on Peyk-e Iran, Ateqeh Rajabi was sentenced to death approximately
three months ago, by a lower court in Neka in the northern Iranian
province of Mazandaran, for "acts incompatible with chastity".
During her trial, at which she was reportedly not represented by
a lawyer, the judge allegedly severely criticised her dress, harshly
reprimanding her. It is alleged that Ateqeh Rajabi was mentally
ill both at the time of her crime and during her trial proceedings.
It is
reported that although Ateqeh Rajabis national ID card stated
that she was 16 years old, the Mazandaran Judiciary announced at
her execution that her age was 22. The case reportedly attracted
the attention of the Head of the Judiciary for the Mazandaran province,
who ensured that the case be heard promptly by the Supreme Court.
In Iran, all death sentences have to be upheld by the Supreme Court
before they can be implemented.
The death
sentence was upheld by the Supreme Court, and Ateqeh Rajabi was
publicly hanged in the city centre of Neka on 15 August. According
to Peyk-e Iran, the lower court judge that issued the original sentence
was the person that put the noose around her head as she went to
the gallows.
On the
same night that she was buried, Ateqeh Rajabis corpse was
reportedly removed from the grave by unknown individuals. The Rajabi
family have lodged a complaint and have called for an investigation.
The co-defendant of Ateqeh Rajabi, an unnamed man, was reportedly
sentenced to 100 lashes. He was released after this sentence was
carried out.
As a party to the International Covenant on Civil and Political
Rights and the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child, Iran is
bound not to execute child offenders. Both treaties provide that
capital punishment shall not be imposed for offences committed by
persons under 18 year of age at the time of committing the offence.
From:
http://web.amnesty.org/library/index/engmde130362004
|