Feb. 9


IRAN----executions

4 prisoners were executed in Qom (south of Tehran)


4 prisoners have been executed in the prison of Qom in the past few days, reported the Mehr news agency.

The report which was quoting Mostafa Barzegar, the prosecutor of Qom, said: " 4 persons convicted of drug trafficking were executed in the prison of Qom during the pas days".

The report didn’t identify the prisoners who were executed and no further details about the charges and exact day of the execution was provided. (source: Iran Human Rights)






IRAQ:

Halt Executions, Abolish Death Penalty


The Iraqi government seems to have given state executioners the green light to execute at will. The government needs to declare an immediate moratorium on all executions and begin an overhaul of its flawed criminal justice system.

Joe Stork, deputy Middle East director at Human Rights Watch (Washington, DC) – Iraqi authorities should halt all executions and abolish the death penalty, Human Rights Watch said today. Since the beginning of 2012, Iraq has executed at least 65 prisoners, 51 of them in January, and 14 more on February 8, for various offenses.

“The Iraqi government seems to have given state executioners the green light to execute at will,”said Joe Stork, deputy Middle East director at Human Rights Watch. “The government needs to declare an immediate moratorium on all executions and begin an overhaul of its flawed criminal justice system.”

Human Rights Watch is particularly concerned that Iraqi courts admit as evidence confessions obtained under coercion. The government should disclose the identities, locations, and status of all prisoners on death row, the crimes for which they have been convicted, court records for their being charged, tried, and sentenced, and details of any impending executions, Human Rights Watch said.

A Justice Ministry official confirmed to Human Rights Watch on February 8 that authorities had executed 14 prisoners earlier in the day. “You should expect more executions in the coming days and weeks,” the official added.

According to the United Nations, more than 1,200 people are believed to have been sentenced to death in Iraq since 2004. The number of prisoners executed during that period has not been revealed publicly. Iraqi law authorizes the death penalty for close to 50 crimes, including terrorism, kidnapping, and murder, but also including such offenses as damage to public property.

Human Rights Watch opposes capital punishment in all circumstances because of its inhumane nature and its finality. International human rights law requires that, where it has not been abolished, the death penalty be imposed only in cases for the most serious crimes in which the judicial system has scrupulously complied with fair trial standards, including the rights of the defendant to competent defense counsel, to be presumed innocent until proven guilty, and not to be compelled to confess guilt.

Criminal trials in Iraq often violate these minimum guarantees, Human Rights Watch said. Many defendants are unable to pursue a meaningful defense or to challenge evidence against them, and lengthy pretrial detention without judicial review is common.

(source: Human Rights Watch)






UNITED ARAB EMIRATES:

17 former death row Indians get six months for illegal alcohol sale


17 Indians who escaped the death penalty last year after being convicted of murder were sentenced yesterday to 6 months in jail for illegally selling alcohol.

The Sharjah Court of Appeal found the men guilty of bootlegging, but because they have already spent 3 years behind bars they will not have to serve any time on that charge.

The verdict brought a conclusion to the criminal case against the men but they are still behind bars because of a pending civil case against them.

The 17 were convicted of killing a Pakistani man in a bootlegging brawl in Sharjah in 2009. They were spared the death sentence after Dh3.4 million in blood money was paid to the victim's family last year.

In September last year, the Sharjah Court of Appeal ordered the men to be deported and commuted their sentences to 2 years.

But prosecutors appealed against the verdict at the Federal Supreme Court, urging it to take into account injuries sustained by 3 other men in the brawl, and further charges of possessing and selling alcohol.

The court ordered the appeal court to review only the bootlegging charges. The men were not in court for yesterday morning's proceedings.

2 of the 3 men who claimed they were injured in the 2009 brawl have filed a Dh1.5 million compensation suit at the Sharjah Court of First Instance. The civil case has been adjourned to February 15.

Yesterday, anxious family members and the men's lawyers were hoping the 17 could return to India soon.

"The prosecution put the travel ban at the behest of the other lawyer," said Bindu Suresh Chettur, of the Mohammed Salman Advocates and Legal Consultants, a firm appointed by the Indian government to defend the convicted men.

"It is for the prosecution to decide whether to revoke this ban. We are hopeful that the accused can go back soon to their country."

Arjinder Singh, brother of Arvinder Singh, one of the jailed men, said: "I am confident they will return soon now. This case has been going on for a while now and there has been a lot of uncertainty.

"Last time we were very disappointed that they were not released."

Another relative said she was cautiously happy about the verdict.

Ranjit Kaur, the wife of Dharampal Singh, another of the convicted men, said: "I am happy but also sceptical about when they will return. It's happened before."

(source: The National)
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