The U.N. human rights chief appealed to Iran on Thursday not to execute a woman
convicted of murdering her husband at age 17.
Razieh Ebrahimi, imprisoned in Ahwaz, is among some 160 people thought to be on
death row in Iran for crimes committed before they turned 18, U.N. High
Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay said in a statement.
More than 250 people are believed to have been executed in Iran this year,
Pillay said.
"The imminent execution of Razieh Ebrahimi has once again brought into stark
focus the unacceptable use of the death penalty against juvenile offenders in
Iran," she said.
Ebrahimi was married at 14 and gave birth to a child a year later. She says
that her husband subjected her to domestic violence, according to the
statement. She was arrested in 2010.
"Regardless of the circumstances of the crime, the execution of juvenile
offenders is clearly prohibited by international human rights law," said
Pillay, a former international judge.
Jannat Mir, a 17-year-old Afghan, was hanged in April in Isfahan prison in Iran
for drug-related crimes, she said, raising concerns about whether he had a fair
trial, because he was said not to have had access to a lawyer or consular
services. Five other Afghans were executed with him for similar offences.
4 "political prisoners" from the Kurdish minority - named as Hamed Ahmadi,
Kamal Malaee, Jahangir Dehghani and Jamshed Dehghani - are also at imminent
risk of execution, Pillay said.
They were convicted in 2010 on charges of Moharebeh (enmity against God) and
Mofsid fil Arz (corruption on earth) after trials that fell short of the
international fair trial standards, she said.
At least 6 political prisoners are among more than 250 people believed to have
been executed in Iran this year, while some sources suggested a "considerably
higher figure", she said.
Most of the executions were for drug-related offences, which do not meet the
threshold of "most serious crimes" for which the death penalty may be applied
in international law, Pillay said.
At least 500 people are known to have been executed in Iran in 2013, including
57 in public, she said.
President Hassan Rouhani has failed to fulfil campaign promises to allow
greater freedom of expression and there has been a sharp rise in executions
since his election, U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said in March.
The U.N. Human Rights Council on Thursday called on all states to ensure that
the death penalty is not imposed for crimes committed by under-18s and to work
toward abolition of the death penalty.
China, India, Japan, Pakistan and Saudi Arabia were among member states voting
against the resolution brought by the European Union on behalf of a group of
sponsors at the forum.
It was adopted by 29 states in favor, with 10 against and 8 abstentions. Russia
and the United States abstained.
"We cannot agree with the slant of this resolution in favor of a moratorium or
abolition, nor with the generality expressed that use of the death penalty
inevitably leads to violations of human rights," U.S. ambassador Keith Harper
told the talks.
Source: Reuters, June 26, 2014