Refleksi : Mengapa Megawati, isterinya SBY  atau juga isteri Boediono tidak 
turut memprotes untuk menyelematkan Sakineh Mohamadi Ashitani dari hukum rajam? 

http://www.kuwaittimes.net/read_news.php?newsid=MTAwMTIxNTEw

Iran halts woman's stoning 'for now'
Published Date: July 12, 2010 

TEHRAN: Iran's judiciary chief has temporarily halted the execution by stoning 
of a woman accused of adultery, state news agency IRNA reported o , quoting a 
judiciary official. But Malek Ajdar Sharifi, head of judiciary of East 
Azerbaijan province, said the crimes committed by Sakineh Mohammadi Ashtiani 
were "heinous" and her execution would take place when the judiciary chief 
decides. "Although the verdict is definitive and applicable, the verdict has 
been halted due to humanitarian reservations and upon
the order of the honourable judiciary chief and it will not be carried out for 
the moment," Ajdar Sharifi told IRNA.

Ashtiani, a 43-year-old mother of two, had been sentenced to death by stoning 
after she was found guilty of adultery by an Iranian court, a ruling that has 
sparked outcry in Western countries. Ajdar Sharifi said the stay on the 
execution was temporary. "Whenever the judiciary chief (Sadeq Larijani) deems 
it expedient, the verdict will be carried out regardless of Western media 
propaganda," he said.

Ashtiani was convicted on May 15, 2006 of having an "illicit relationship" with 
two men, according to her lawyer and London-based rights watchdog Amnesty 
International. Amnesty said she received 99 lashes as per her sentence but was 
subsequently accused of "adultery while being married" in September 2006 during 
the trial of a man accused of murdering her husband. Ajdar Sharifi said 
Mohammadi-Ashtiani had committed several crimes.

She is not only accused of having illicit relations, but she has also committed 
a lot of heinous crimes," he said. "If we give the details of the crimes she 
committed, the public will understand the depth of her inhuman and criminal 
nature. But due to humanitarian considerations we can't give the details." He 
said her crimes were so severe that "if she had only cut the head of her 
husband, it would have been better than what she has done".

On Friday, Iran's top human rights official Mohammad Javad Larijani had said 
that Mohammadi-Ashtiani's death sentence was "under revision" as the chief of 
judiciary preferred to use another penalty for executions instead of stoning 
"and that is true for Ms Mohammadi Ashtiani." Larijani did not say what penalty 
she could face instead, but added: "The penalty of stoning exists under the law 
but the judges rarely use it.

The Iranian embassy in London said in a statement reported by The Times on 
Friday that Ashtiani would no longer be stoned to death. The embassy said that 
"according to information from the relevant judicial authorities in Iran, 
(Ashtiani) will not be executed by stoning." Explaining the details of her 
case, her lawyer Mohammad Mostafai told AFP on Saturday that his client knew 
the man who "killed her husband and because she was at home when the murder 
took place, she was accused as an accomplice". "But after her kids pardoned her 
in the case of murder, she now stands accused of adultery with that man.

Under Iranian law if a murder victim's family, in this case the children of 
Mohammadi-Ashtiani and her slain husband, forgive the accused, the convict can 
be either pardoned or given a jail term. Mostafai added that adultery cases 
involving women in Iran arise due to difficulties in getting divorces from 
their husbands despite having "troubled marriages". The stoning sentence has 
sparked an outcry in Western countries with US State Department spokesman Mark 
Toner calling it a "barbaric and abhorrent act.


British Foreign Secretary William Hague said in London that if the "mediaeval" 
execution went ahead it would "disgust and appall" the world. An open letter 
condemning the execution was also signed by figures such as former US secretary 
of state Condoleezza Rice, three ex-British foreign ministers, Nobel peace 
laureate Jose Ramos-Horta and actor Robert De Niro. - AFP

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