‘Sultan of Coins’ executed as Iran violates human rights to placate anger over economy and corruption"سلطان سکه" اعدام شده است، زیرا ایران حقوق بشر را نقض می کند تا عصبانیت مردم را بر اقتصاد و فساد اداری کندThree more remain on death row over financial crimes after convictions in quick trials that critics say fail to meet Iranian or international legal standards
November 17, 2018
The execution of two Iranian gold
traders this week has raised concerns that the authorities are
seeking to use them as scapegoats to divert attention from corruption at the
heart of the regime.
But while the Iranian
establishment has hailed the arrests and prosecutions of the traders,
charged with corruption and tried by a special court dealing with cases of
economic malfeasance, rights advocates have criticised what they call “kangaroo
trials”.
Among the executed
was Vahid Mazloumin, branded “the Sultan of Coins” for hoarding gold in an
alleged effort to manipulate prices.
The pair were
convicted on charges of “spreading corruption on earth”, considered a severe
breach of Iranian law. Amnesty International called the trial “grossly unfair”.
“In Iran, unfortunately,
instead of punishing the main elements of systematic corruption, they punish
and execute persons who are not important,” said Mahdi Khalili, a reformist
politician and political scientist in Tehran. “The main ones are free from any
problems or punishment.”
Iran ranked 130 out of 180
countries in Transparency International’s 2017 corruption index.
Economic pressures
exacerbated by tough US sanctions on Iran under the Trump administration have
hammered away at the rial, which has lost 75 per cent of its value this year.
But the executions of the
two businessmen, with three more merchants on death row, shows that Iran is in
danger of exacerbating its human rights difficulties in order to placate anger
over perceived corruption.
Human rights specialists
and jurists, including Iranian Nobel Peace Prize winner Shirin Ebadi, have said
the suspects were condemned to death in quick trials that were unfair and
failed to measure up to Iranian law much less international standards, which
include a thorough appellate review process for death sentences.
Among other
irregularities, the courts apply secretive national security rules to cases of
white-collar crime, restricting the ability of defendants to get a lawyer.
In Iran, unfortunately,
instead of punishing the main elements of systematic corruption, they punish
and execute persons who are not important
Mahdi Khalili, reformist
politician
“Iran’s hanging of people
who have been convicted in courts without a fair trial is a blatant violation
of law,” said Hadi Ghaemi, executive director of the Centre for Human Rights in
Iran, describing the trial venues as “kangaroo courts”.
The prosecutions suggest
Tehran is attempting to shift blame for the collapse of the country’s currency
to low-level traders and grey market businessmen in an effort to deflect from
the Iranian system’s own incompetence and corruption, rooted in the economic
power of religious charities and ideologically fervent security branches, especially
the Revolutionary Guard.
It also shows what many
critics have described over the years as the arbitrary nature of justice under
the Islamic republic, where prominent members of ethnic and religious
minorities as well as the Shia Muslim majority, and dissidents as well as
businessmen, can become entangled in an obscure, Kafkaesque legal system
overseen by Islamic jurists under the sway of shadowy security enforcers.
State-dominated media
hailed the executions: “Death: Compensation for betraying the people,” said a
headline in the daily newspaper Tejarat, or Commerce.
Mr Mazloumin, 58, earned
the moniker Sultan of Coins for his perceived mastery of the Iranian gold
market, reportedly trading up to $30m worth of gold a day. Iranians
have rushed to convert their savings into gold as the country’s currency has
lost value.
Mr Mazloumin and his
partner were reported to have been arrested in July, accused of hoarding
two tons of gold in order drive up prices, according to local media. He always
insisted on his innocence, explaining in an interview published after his death
that gold prices rose and fell based on supply and demand.
Supreme Leader Ali
Khamenei approved the creation of special economic courts to handle corruption
cases in August. Since then, dozens of businesspeople have been sentenced by
the court.
Mr Mazloumin and Mohammad
Esmail Ghasemi were tried hurriedly in a proceeding that was partially
broadcast on state television in September, with hardline media clamouring for
the ultimate punishment and a charge of spreading corruption on earth.
“Gallows waiting for the Sultan of Coins,”
the Javan newspaper declared in
September.
The two men were initially
sentenced to death in early October. The judiciary announced on 21 October that
the death sentences against the two had been upheld.
This week they were
abruptly hung at the gallows.
Mr Khalili said he
suspected the executions were meant to distract the public from scrutinising
the underlying causes of corruption, but also to send a warning to private
sector vendors to lower their profit margins. While both may be
humdrum political objectives, rights advocates say they in no way justify
the death penalty.
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