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A
rare victory for women's rights in Iran
By:
Elahe Amani, A Notable Human Rights activist
March 28, 2008
یک پیروزی استثنائی برای حقوق زنان در ایران
رأی استثنائی دادگاه بر آزادی مکرمه ابراهیمی، محکوم به مجازات سنگسار،
صادر گردیده است.
این رأی مورد استقبال مدافعین حقوق بشر قرار گرفته است!
نوشته الهه امانی، فعّال برجسته حقوق بشر
The article is published in Open Democracy Site
http://www.opendemocracy.net/article/5050/iran_stop_stoning_now |
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A
rare victory for women's rights in Iran
By: Elahe Amani* Human rights defenders have welcomed a "rare ruling"
leading to the release of a woman awaiting execution by stoning in Iran.
Now, the women's movement must move forward to end all forms of
discrimination and violence against women; "nothing more and nothing
less" writes Elahe Amani. |
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On the brink of the Persian New Year, on 17 March 2008,
human rights defenders welcomed the news of the release of Mokarrameh
Ebrahimi and her son Ali from prison in Takestan, Qazvin province, Iran.
Mokarrameh had been awaiting execution by stoning for the past eleven
years. She was sentenced to death after being convicted of adultery,
along with Ja'far Kiani with whom she had two children. While in prison,
she gave birth to their son Ali who remained in custody with his mother
after he was born. Her partner, Ja'far Kiani was stoned to death on 5
July 2007.
A rare ruling
Mokarrameh's release was the outcome of the efforts of
the Stop Stoning Forever Campaign in Iran, the tireless efforts of her
attorney, Shadi Sadr and the global human rights community and women's
movement who put pressure on the Iranian government.
Shadi Sadr said, "It was a rare ruling... I cannot tell
how the commission came up with this decision... But you cannot deny the
role of public opinion and domestic and international pressures." |
| When news that the sentence of stoning to
death of Mokarrameh Ebrahimi and Ja'far Kiani was about to be carried
out, activists from Iran's Stop Stoning Forever campaign publicized the
plans for these executions. Their efforts led to a widespread objection
to the sentence by civil society, women's movement and human rights
defenders in Iran and globally. On 20 June 2007, news reports stated
that the head of the judiciary in Iran, Ayatollah Mahmoud Shahroudi, had
issued a written order requiring the judiciary in Takestan to halt the
execution temporarily. However, the suspension of these sentences lasted
only two weeks and on 5 July Ja'far Kiani was stoned to death in
Aghche-kand, a village outside Takestan.
In mid-October 2007, Shahroudi sent Mokarrameh Ebrahimi's case to the
Amnesty and Clemency Commission, who have now ordered her release. She
is believed to have been pardoned by the Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali
Khamenei.
Mokarrameh had stated all along that she was under the impression
that her husband had divorced her. (In Iran, divorce is the exclusive
right of a man, and a man can divorce his wife whenever he pleases - a
law challenged by the One Million Signatures campaign to change
discriminatory laws). She maintained that she had married Ja'far in good
faith, and in the community they were living, they were known and
accepted as being a family. Although there were no witnesses to the
alleged crime of adultery, or having a child out of wedlock, the death
sentence was based on the judge's "knowledge" or "perception" of
adultery.
Eradicating stoning forever
According to Amnesty International, at least ten women in Iran -
Khayrieh, Kobra N, Fatemeh, Ashraf Kalhori, Shamameh Ghorbani, Leyla
Ghomi, Hajar and sisters Zohreh and Azar Kabiri-niat - are still at risk
of being stoned to death, along with two men, Abdollah Farivar and an
unnamed Afghan national. |
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The Global Campaign to Stop Stoning and Killing Women
defines stoning as: "A method of execution in which an organized group
throws stones or rocks at the person they wish to execute. Although it
takes many different forms, stoning has been used throughout history and
in many religious and cultural traditions as a type of community justice
or capital punishment. In Iran, as in Sudan, stoning is codified into
law for adultery. Although the head of the judiciary of Iran, Ayatollah
Shahroudi, decreed in 2002 that stoning would no longer be practiced in
Iran, the laws were never officially removed from the penal code and
stoning sentences continue to be handed down by lower judges today." |
| The practice of stoning is a cruel and
inhumane punishment, irrevocable in nature. The Islamic Republic of Iran
is a State party to the International Convention on Civil & Political
Rights (ICCPR) which states in Article 6 that "in countries which have
not abolished the death penalty, sentence of death may be imposed only
for the most serious crimes." Executions for crimes "beyond intentional
crimes with lethal or other extremely grave consequences," are
considered to violate the convention; executions for adultery clearly
fall into this category. According to Article 7 of the convention "no
one shall be subjected to torture or to cruel, inhuman or degrading
treatment or punishment." As a particularly brutal form of execution,
death by stoning clearly violates the provisions of this Article.
The Islamic Penal Code of Iran allows execution by stoning as a
punishment for adultery. Stones are thrown at the convicted individual,
who is buried up to the waist (if he is a man) or up to the chest (if
she is a woman), until the individual dies from impact of the blows. The
fact is that the vast majority of people being sentenced to death by
stoning are women. Women suffer disproportionately from this cruel
punishment. The overall discrimination against women in all aspects of
life leaves women more susceptible to conviction for adultery. Women are
not being treated equally before the law which is a clear violation of
the basic human rights of Iranian women. Women are particularly
vulnerable to unfair trials due to their lack of resources, under
representation and high rates of illiteracy.
The "Stop Stoning Forever" campaign is a grassroots movement launched
on 1 October 2006 by Iranian feminists. Since then, according to Amnesty
International, six people have been saved from stoning: Hajieh
Esmailvand, Soghra Mola'i, Zahra Reza'i, Parisa and her husband, Najaf,
Zahra Reza'I and Mokarrameh Ebrahimi. Others have been granted stays of
execution, and some of the cases are being reviewed or re-tried.
The "Stop Stoning Forever" is now a partner with The Global Campaign
to Stop Stoning and Killing Women. The goal is to raise awareness on
culturally-justified practices that abuse women's human rights. The
women's movement will keep moving forward, not only to save women from
being stoned to death, but also to eradicate all forms of discrimination
and violence against women. Nothing more and nothing less.
* Elahe Amani is a gender, peace and
social justice activist. She has taught courses on the Global Women's
Movement and Women in Cross Cultural Perspectives at the California
State University (CSU), Long Beach and Fullerton. She is currently chair
of the Women's Intercultural Network (WIN),
a global women's organisation with grassroots circles in Uganda, Japan
and Afghanistan. Amani has been active with the UN Commission on the
Status of Women (CSW) and taken part in several panels on issues related
to women's human rights, the Stop Stoning Forever campaign and the One
Million Signatures campaign to change discriminatory laws in Iran.
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