Rihaneh. Jabbari 26-year-old student
In defending itself against aggression One of the agents of the Iranian regimeAfter 7.5 years in prison, was executed at the hands of the executionersThis is just one example of the crimes
This regime is Misogynist and rear wing
Reyhaneh
Jabbari
ExecutedbytheMullahs’Regime in Iran
Reyhaneh
Jabbari, 26, was executed at the break of dawn on Saturday, October 25, 2014 in
Gohardasht Prison in Karaj, west of Tehran. She had already spent 7 years in
prison.
Jabbari,
a decorator, was 19-years old when charged with murdering Morteza Sarbandi, a
47-year old married doctor who had three children and was a former employee of
the Ministry of Intelligence (MOIS). Jabbari, defended herself against the MOIS
employee’s attempt to rape her.
Ahmad
Shaheed, the United Nations Special Rapporteur on Human Rights in Iran, had at
the time described her death sentences as inadmissible and unfair. He cited
credible documents that proved Jabbari was innocent of premeditated murder
charges. The UN Special Rapporteur emphasized if Jabbari’s claims are true she
is twice a victim: once by the individual who intended to rape her; and second,
by the judicial system that must protect individuals against sexual and
physical aggression.
Jabbari
was convicted after a deeply flawed trial process and later executed, despite
international efforts to see a fair trial and halt it. Reyhaneh was also put
under savage torture by the clerical regime's henchmen to extract forced
confessions.
Reyhaneh
Jabbari was laid to rest on October 25, 2014 in Tehran’s Behesht-e Zahra
Cemetery. This is while state authorities had dispatched over 150 armed forces
to encircle the site and did not allow anyone to deliver any speeches in her
memory.
Since
then, brave Iranians inside Iran have protested the execution despite threats of
arrests. Hundreds of people have expressed solidarity with Reyhaneh calling her
a symbol of a girl who never succumbed to the misogynist laws of the mullahs’
ruling Iran. Her will has been echoed throughout the world creating more
antagonism against the Iranian regime and sprouting hope that Iran will soon be
freed of such tyranny.
A brief look at the history of
this case:
-
13 April 2014 – Amnesty International warns: “The death sentence of Iranian woman Reyhaneh Jabbari
has been sent to the Office of Implementation of Sentences in Tehran, Iran.
Once death sentences have gone to this body, they may be carried out at any
time. Reyhaneh Jabbari, aged 26, was arrested in 2007 for the murder of Morteza
Abdolali Sarbandi, a former employee of Iran’s Ministry of Intelligence.”
-
14 April 2014: A group of people rallied outside the judiciary in Tehran to
save Reyhaneh Jabbari’s life. Security agents attacked and dispersed the
protesters.
-
15 April 2014: Ahmad Shaheed, UN Special Rapporteur on Human Rights in Iran,
called on the regime to stop the execution of Reyhaneh Jabbari on the charges
of murdering an MOIS agent.
-
30 September 2014: Amnesty International issued a statement saying: Reyhaneh
Jabbari has been transferred to Gohardasht Prison to be executed, and it is
possible she will be executed today, Tuesday.
-
30 September 2014: State agents in Gohardasht Prison responded to follow-ups
made by Shole Pakravan, Reyhaneh’s mother and said: “She has been transferred to
this prison. Reyhaneh is on death row and come tomorrow to receive her body!”
-
1 October 2014: US State Department spokesman Jen Psaki issued a statement
saying: “We are deeply concerned of
reports indicating Iranian officials are finalizing Reyhaneh Jabbari’s death
sentence.”
-
1 October 2014: Reyhaneh Jabbari’s lawyer said: “Currently her case has been
sent for the ruling to be carried out. However, there are no orders in the
case.” State-run ‘Iran’ daily said on Reyhaneh
Jabbari’s execution: “A 10-day period was granted to
her so her family could gain the consent of the victim’s family.”
-
5 October 2014: Former EU foreign policy Chief Catherine Ashton called for
Jabbari’s execution to be stopped.
-
8 October 2014: State-run ‘Mehr’ news agency wired a report entitled “Reyhaneh Jabbari to be
executed tomorrow” reading in part: “Tomorrow, the 10-day grace
period granted to Reyhaneh Jabbari comes to an end and she will be sent to the
gallows if she cannot gain pardon from the victim’s parents.”
-
13 October 2014: European Parliament President Martin Schultz called for
Reyhaneh Jabbari’s execution to be stopped. In a letter to Larijani, Iran’s
Majlis (parliament), Schultz said, “The
European Union has a strong and principled viewpoint opposing the death
sentence. Cancelling this ruling is amongst this union’s concrete objective of
human rights policymaking.”
-
17 October 2014: Reyhaneh Jabbari is once again on the verge of execution.
Mohammad Shahriari, head of Tehran’s criminal prosecution said the victim’s
parents are not willing to pardon and therefore there is a possibility that
Reyhaneh Jabbari’s death sentence will be carried out.
-
25 October 2014: Reyhaneh Jabbari, a 26-year old student and designer, was
executed in Gohardasht Prison at dawn.
-
25 October 2014: Mrs. Maryam Rajavi, President-elect of the Iranian Resistance,
described the execution of student and decorator Reyhaneh Jabbari as yet
another sign of the mullahs’ viciousness and misogynist nature. She called on
all international human rights organizations to strongly condemn this young
woman’s execution and take immediate binding action to stop executions, torture
and massacres in Iran.
-
26 October 2014: The funeral of Reyhaneh Jabbari was held on the morning of
Sunday, October 26 amid tight security measures in block 98, row 13 of Tehran’s
Behesht-e Zahra Cemetery. Her family, friends and people joined the ceremony
and laid flowers and expressed condolences to her family. State officials had
stationed nearly 300 State Security Force agents and other security forces in
all streets of this cemetery to keep a close watch on the participants in the
funeral.
-
28 October 2014: Ed Royce (R-CA), Chairman of the US House of Representatives
Foreign Affairs Committee, issued a statement in response to the UN’s
investigation highlighting worsening human rights conditions in Iran. This text
reads in part: “… Just this past weekend, the
Iranian regime hanged a 26-year old woman, Reyhaneh Jabbari, whose only crime
was defending herself against rape. The regime’s response to the recent acid attacks
on Iranian women is appalling but not surprising... I fear that Iran’s Basij
militia will see this new law as an even more liberal license to attack Iranian
women for how they are dressed. Hopefully Iranian society will step up to these
acts of cowardice.”
-
29 October 2014: Rupert Colville, UNHCR spokesperson condemned Reyhaneh
Jabbari’s execution. He said he was shocked from this hanging. Colville had
expressed concerns about increasing executions in Iran at a press conference in
Geneva held October 28, 2014.
Reyhaneh Jabbari’s execution
received widespread coverage in world news media outlets referring to the
flagrant violation of human rights by the Iranian regime:
-
Amnesty International – 25 October 2014: AI condemned the execution of Reyhaneh
Jabbari as “another bloody stain on Iran’s
human rights record” and “an affront to justice.”
“The shocking news that
Reyhaneh Jabbari has been executed is deeply disappointing in the extreme,” said Hassiba Hadj Sahraoui ،Amnesty
International’s Deputy Director for the Middle East and North Africa Programme. “Once again Iran has insisted
on applying the death penalty despite serious concerns over the fairness of the
trial.”
-
US State Department Website – 25 October 2014: Jen Psaki, Department Spokesperson: “We join our voice with those
who call on Iran to respect the fair trial guarantees afforded to its people
under Iran's own laws and its international obligations."
-
UK Foreign & Commonwealth Office: “Following
the execution of Reyhaneh Jabbari, Foreign Office Minister, Tobias Ellwood MP,
calls on Iran to end the use of the death penalty.”
Tobias
Ellwood, Foreign Office Minister for the Middle East, said:
“I am very concerned and
saddened that it has been used in the case of Reyhaneh Jabbari.”
-
CNN – 25 October 2014: “Reyhaneh
Jabbari, 26, was sentenced to death for the 2007 killing of Morteza Abdolali
Sarbandi, a former employee of Iran's Ministry of Intelligence and Security.
The United Nations has said she never received a fair trial. The U.S. State
Department also said there were concerns about the trial.”
-
Reuters – 25 October 2014: “Reyhaneh
Jabbari walked to the gallows at dawn on Saturday in Tehran's Evin prison after
failing to secure a reprieve from the dead man's relatives within the 10-day
deadline set by sharia law in force since the 1979 Islamic Revolution.”
-
Agence France Presse – 25 October 2014: “Iran
executed Saturday a 26-year-old woman who had spent five years on death row for
the murder of a former intelligence official, defying international pressure to
spare her life”.
-
The Independent – 25 October 2014: “Ms
Jabbari’s mother Shole Pakravan confirmed her death. She said her 26-year-old
daughter was hanged in a Tehran prison and she was due to see her daughter’s
body at the cemetery today”.
-
Guardian – 25 October 2014: “Iran
has ignored an international campaign to spare the life of a 26-year-old woman
convicted of murder by hanging her at dawn on Saturday.The UN and bodies
including the European Union and Amnesty International had said that the
interior designer’s confession for killing Morteza Sarbandi in 2007 was
obtained under intense pressure and threats from Iranian prosecutors, and she
should have had a retrial”
-
Associated Press – 27 October 2014: “Ahmed
Shaheed spoke Monday, a day before presenting his report on Iran to the General
Assembly's human rights committee.
Shaheed says he's never been
allowed into Iran and has been banned every year since he was appointed in June
2011. Shaheed again condemned the execution on Saturday of Reyhaneh Jabbari, a
woman convicted of murdering a man she said was trying to rape her. ”
-
The New York Times – 28 October 2014: “A
United Nations investigator said on Monday, drawing attention to rights abuses
just as Iran’s president is pushing for a diplomatic breakthrough with the
West. Mr. Shaheed said he had been shocked by the execution on Saturday of
Reyhaneh Jabbari, 26, who was convicted of killing a man she had accused of
raping her.” .
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