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Communist Vietnam's secret death penalty conveyor belt: How country trails only China and Iran for 'astonishing' number of executions

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Prisoners are dragged from their cells at 4am without warning to be given a lethal injection Vietnam's use of the death penalty has been thrust into the spotlight after a real estate tycoon was on Thursday sentenced to be executed in one of the biggest corruption cases in the country's history. Truong My Lan, a businesswoman who chaired a sprawling company that developed luxury apartments, hotels, offices and shopping malls, was arrested in 2022.

Female juvenile offender, two men hanged in Iran

Zeynab Sekanvand
"Zeinab was reportedly married to a man when she was 15 years old and, according to sources close to her, she was abused by her husband."

Iran Human Rights, October 2, 2018: Zeynab Sekanvand, a juvenile offender who was 17 years old when arrested for the murder of her husband, was executed this morning at Urmia prison along with two other prisoners. 

Despite ratifying several international covenants banning the death penalty for offences committed at under 18 years of age, Iran remains the world’s biggest executioner of juvenile offenders.  

Iran Human Rights (IHR) strongly condemns the executions and calls for international condemnation of Iran’s repeated violations of the international law and arbitrary use of the death penalty.

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Mahmood Amiry-Moghaddam, the spokesperson of IHR said: “The execution of Zeinab Sekanvand, the fifth juvenile executed in 2018, the threat of death sentence for striking truck drivers, and the new death sentences under the pretext of fighting the corruption, which lacks the minimum standards of a due process, must be met with international condemnations. We especially call on the European countries which have the dialogue with Iran to strongly condemn these unlawful death sentences and executions. These countries, including the members of the European Union and Norway, must show that they don’t close their eyes on the serious human rights violations by the Iranian authorities while trying to save the nuclear deal.”

Public hanging of a female prisoner in Iran (file photo).Zeinab was born on June 22, 1994, and was arrested on March 1, 2012, for the murder of her husband. 

She was sentenced to death by branch 2 of Urmia's criminal court. Her death sentence was confirmed by branch 8 of Iran's Supreme Court.

Zeinab was reportedly married to a man when she was 15 years old and, according to sources close to her, she was abused by her husband.

Iran Human Rights has obtained parts of the text of Zeinab's court verdict. According to the document, Zeinab was physically abused by her husband and she filed a complaint with Iranian authorities. However, Iranian authorities reportedly did not follow up on her complaint.  

Zeinab Sekaanvand spent the first two years of her imprisonment in Khoy Prison (West Azerbaijan province, northwestern Iran). However, when she was sentenced to death, she was transferred to the women's ward of Urmia Central Prison.

She was scheduled to be executed in October 2016 but her death sentence was postponed.

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None of today’s executions has been announced by the Iranian authorities. But according to IHR sources, all the three prisoners were convicted of murder.

IHR has also received reports about the transfer of at least 14 prisoners in Rajaishahr prison to solitary confinement. These prisoners are scheduled to be executed on Wednesday, October 3.

Source: Iran Human Rights, October 2, 2018


Despite Pleas, Iran Executes Female Juvenile Offender


Zeinab Sekaanvand was convicted of killing her abusive husband, undated

One day after a warning by Amnesty International, Iran has executed Zeinab Sekaanvand, a woman who was convicted for the murder of her husband at age 17.

Zeinab had married her husband at age 15, but Amnesty urged Iran not to carry out the death sentence also because "she was subjected to a grossly unfair legal process".

Regardless of the call by Amnesty and human rights activists, the death sentence was carried out in the northwestern city of Urmiya in the morning of October 2. She was 24 years old.

According to religious law, Iran considers girls as young as nine criminally liable and the age for boys is 15, based on a notion of when children reach puberty.

Amnesty International in its plea to Iran had said, "She did not see a lawyer until her final trial session in 2014, when she retracted 'confessions' she had made when she had no access to legal representation. She also says that, following her arrest, she was tortured by male police officers through beatings all over her body."

Source: Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, October 2, 2018


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"One is absolutely sickened, not by the crimes that the wicked have committed,
but by the punishments that the good have inflicted." -- Oscar Wilde

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