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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.

Iran: Execution of Sixth Juvenile Offender in 2018

Omid Rostami
The Islamic Penal Code puts the age of criminal responsibility for males at 15 and 9 for females.

Iran Human Rights (IHR); December 3, 2018: A juvenile offender who had been sentenced to death for committing an alleged murder at the age of 16, was hanged at Rajai Shahr prison. 

Iran Human Rights (IHR) had previously reported about the execution of 10 prisoners at Rajai Shahr Prison on November 14, 2018. 

New documents obtained by IHR show that one of the executed prisoners was a juvenile offender identifies as Omid Rostami. Omid Rostami is the sixth juvenile offender executed by Iranian authorities in 2018.

IHR strongly condemns Omid Rostami's execution and calls for strong international reactions. 

Mahmood Amiry-Moghaddam, the spokesperson of IHR said: " The international community must not tolerate Iranian authorities' continuous executions of juvenile offenders. We expect stronger reactions by the EU and the Norwegian government which have ongoing dialogues with the Iranian authorities and which are regarded as the world leaders in the fight against the death penalty. Attempts to save the nuclear deal must not lead to closed eyes on juvenile executions and other serious human rights violations by the Iranian authorities ". 

Omid Rostami's birth certificate shows that he was born on July 10, 1996. He was sentenced to death for a murder committed on July 12, 2012, two days after his 16th birthday.

Omid had been subjected to additional psychological torture by being taken to the gallows four times earlier.

Despite ratifying the United Nations' Convention on the Rights of the Child which bans the death penalty for offenses committed at under 18 years of age, Iran stays the world's top executioner of juvenile offenders. 

Each time, the plaintiffs (victim's family) had said that they wanted to rethink about carrying out the execution or forgiving him.

According to the Iranian Islamic Penal Code (IPC) murder is punishable by qisas which means “retribution in kind” or retaliation. In this way, the State effectively puts the responsibility of the death sentence for murder on the shoulders of the victim’s family. 

In many cases, the victim's family are encouraged to put the rope is around the prisoner's neck and even carry out the actual execution by pulling off the chair the prisoner is standing on.

“On September 4, 2018, the prosecutor told the plaintiffs that they have the maximum of one month time to take their final decision to forgive Omid or carry out his execution. Otherwise, Omid should be released on bail,” the juvenile offender’s mother told IHR.

Finally, the plaintiffs went to the prison and carried out Omid's execution on the early morning of November 14, 2018.

The Islamic Penal Code (IPC) puts the age of criminal responsibility for males at 15 and 9 for females. In case of murder and other offenses punishable by Hadd or qisas, article 91 of the amended IPC of 2013 allows judges to use their discretion and not issue a death sentence against a child who was not able to understand the nature and consequences of the crime at the time. 

The amended law also allows the courts to rely on “the opinion of a forensic doctor or other means it deems appropriate” to establish whether a defendant understood the consequences of their actions.

However, according to Omid's family, he didn't have a lawyer, and the family's request for a forensic examination of Omid was not accepted by the judge. 

According to Omid’s mother, the juvenile had two previous records of robbery and convictions, and the Court took that as a proof of his maturity and therefore, didn't send Omid's case to forensic medicine.

Despite ratifying the United Nations' Convention on the Rights of the Child which bans the death penalty for offenses committed at under 18 years of age, Iran stays the world's top executioner of juvenile offenders. 

According to reports by IHR, Iranian authorities have executed at least 40 juvenile offenders since 2013. 

Source: Iran Human Rights, December 3, 2018


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