Bachelet urges Iran to stop executing juvenile offendersکمیسر عالی حقوق بشر سازمان ملل از ایران خواست تا به اعدام نوجوانان پایان دهد
October 5, 2018
GENEVA (5 October 2018) – UN High Commissioner for Human
Rights Michelle Bachelet on Friday condemned the execution in Iran this week of
Zeinab Sekaanvand Lokran, a juvenile offender. Ms. Sekaanvand was
convicted of murdering her husband in 2012, when she was 17 years
old, but her claims that she was coerced into confessing to the killing, and
that she had been a victim of domestic violence, were reportedly not adequately
examined during her trial.
Despite a number of appeals from UN Special Rapporteurs
and the UN Secretary-General since her conviction in October 2014, Ms.
Sekaanvand was executed on 2 October 2018. Her family was given one day’s
notice of her execution, for a final visit. Her detention and trial were also
reportedly marred by procedural irregularities, including being beaten by police
officers following her arrest, and having no access to a lawyer until her final
trial session, where she recanted her confession.
Dozens of other convicted juvenile offenders reportedly
remain on death row in Iran, which has already executed at least five juvenile
offenders so far this year. Executions are often carried out at short notice,
allowing little room for scrutiny and transparency.
“The sheer injustice in the case of Zeinab Sekaanvand
Lokran is deeply distressing,” High Commissioner Bachelet said. “The serious
question marks over her conviction appear not to have been adequately addressed
before she was executed. The bottom line is that she was a juvenile at the time
the offence was committed and international law clearly prohibits the execution
of juvenile offenders.”
“As a State party to both the Convention on the Rights of
the Child and the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights*, Iran
has an obligation to abide by their provisions and to end the use of the death
penalty against juvenile offenders,” Bachelet said.
She stressed that the UN Human Rights Office opposes the
use of the death penalty in all circumstances, as no judiciary in any part of
the world is mistake-free.
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