UN Rights Expert Urges Iran
to End Death Penalty for Minors کارشناس حقوق بشر ایران از ایران خواست تا مجازات مرگ برای افراد زیر سن
قانونی را لغو کند
October
24, 2018
UNITED NATIONS —
The U.N. independent expert on human rights in Iran urged
Tehran on Wednesday to abolish the death penalty for juveniles.
"I appeal to the Iranian authorities to abolish the
practice of sentencing children to death, and to commute all death sentences
issued against children in line with international law," Javaid Rehman,
special rapporteur for human rights in Iran, told a General Assembly human
rights committee.
Execution of juvenile convicts violates international law
and contravenes the Convention of the Rights of the Child and the International
Covenant on Civil and Political Rights.
Rehman said five individuals convicted of having
committed murder as minors have been put to death this year in Iran. The most
recent, Zeinab Sekaanvand, was executed three weeks ago. She was accused of
killing her husband in 2012 when she was 17.
"Claims that she was coerced into confessing to the
killing, had been beaten following her arrest and was a victim of domestic
violence were reportedly not adequately examined during her trial," the
special rapporteur said.
Iran not alone
Iran is by far the leader among a handful of countries — which
include Saudi Arabia, Pakistan, South Sudan and Yemen — that have executed
minors in the past decade, according to the Death Penalty Information Center
website.
Rehman said the Iranian executions continue despite
amendments in 2013 to the Islamic Penal Code that allow judges to give
alternate sentences for juvenile offenders in certain circumstances.
He said there were "numerous" other juvenile
offenders on death row in Iran.
The Iranian government says it has established a task
force that will deal with the protection of the rights of children and
adolescents, and Rehman has urged it to address the situation of juveniles on
death row.
Needs improvement
The report from Rehman, a law professor at Brunel
University London, was his first since he took up his post in July. He has not
yet visited Iran but has requested that authorities allow him to have
unhindered access to the country.
He expressed a series of concerns about human rights in
Iran, where for nearly a year the country has seen a wave of protests fueled by
a flagging economy, high unemployment, the rising cost of living and social
discontent.
At the start of the demonstrations last December,
numerous arrests were made, and at least 22 people were killed during a
security crackdown. Media workers have also been harassed and intimidated.
"I remain concerned about the fate of those arrested
during the protests, and call upon the government to ensure that all those
imprisoned for peacefully exercising their freedom of opinion and expression
are released," Rehman said.
The situation of women and girls also warrants
improvement. One issue that has been in the spotlight is the mandatory veiling
of women.
"Any form of coercion on women violates their
rights," Rehman said. "So, enforcement and forced dress code,
thereby, is contrary to international human rights law."
The Iranian government rejects the concept of the special
rapporteur's mandate, but provides some cooperation with his office. Speaking
at the meeting where Rehman presented his report, the Iranian representative
said the exercise was "counterproductive" and was about
"pressure, not cooperation."
Progress
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