Saving Iran’s Children From Death Row
The mass execution of 20 people in Iran’s Rajai Shahr
prison was not the only grim news from that country this past week.
On August
1, Alireza Tajiki, who was sentenced to death at age 15 following a trial that
fell short of international standards, was saved from execution thanks to the
last-minute efforts of his family and his lawyer, Nasrin Sotoudeh.
Unfortunately, the postponement is only temporary.
Alireza,now19,wasconvictedofrapeandmurder and set to be executed August 3.
AminTajiki,Alireza’sbrother,toldHumanRightsWatchthattheirfamilyhadrequestedaretrialbasedonnewevidence, but the court rejected their
attempts.
Scores of
children are believed to be on death row in Iran, despite denials by the
head of Iran’s judiciary, Ayatollah Sadegh Amoli Larijani. Amnesty
International has identified the
names and locations of
49 such children, and the UN believes the
number could be as high as 160. The majority of children on death
row in Iran were convicted of murder in trials that fell far short of
international standards. In many cases, they reported torture and mistreatment
in detention.
On July
18, Amnesty International reported that
Iranian authorities hanged Hassan
Afshar, who was arrested at 17 and convicted of “forced male to male anal
intercourse” (lavat-e be onf).
He had no access to a lawyer.
As a
party to the International Convention on Civil and Political Rights and the
Convention on Rights of the Child, Iran is obliged to end child executions. The
country has taken some small, positive steps. Since 2013, judges may use their
discretion to not sentence a child offender to death if they do not understand
the nature of the crime. Judges may now seek the opinion of the government’s
Forensic Medical Department to assess the child’s mental state. Also, all
children sentenced to death under Iran’s old penal code are eligible to be
retried under the new one, passed in 2013, although they have to file for a
retrial.
But, not
only do these narrow reforms fail to meet Iran’s obligation to end all
executions of children, but in practice, they are negated by ongoing abuses.
Iranian authorities frequently deny children in pretrial detention access to a
lawyer. Many children spend up to a decade on death row based primarily on
confessions made under credible allegations of torture.
Now the
Iranian judiciary should save all child offenders from the cruel fate of
execution by granting them retrials in accordance with international human
rights law standards. Child offenders like Alireza should never have been on
death row in the first place.
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