Dec. 4


CHINA:

China to Stop Using Organs From Executed Prisoners----But new supply may be hard to find


China says that on Jan. 1, in response to human rights concerns, it will cease transplanting organs taken from executed prisoners, although uncertainties linger over where a replacement supply will come from, state media reported today. China had previously said it would phase out the practice by sometime in early 2015. But state media reports announced the 1st firm date for ending the practice, citing the architect of China's transplant system, Huang Jiefu.

International human rights activists and domestic critics have long said that standard safeguards were ignored when obtaining organs from prisoners who may have been pressured to donate. However, China has one of the world's lowest levels of organ donation because of ingrained cultural attitudes and a legal requirement that family members give consent before organs are donated, even if a person had expressed a desire to donate. China executes thousands of people a year, more than the rest of the world put together???but it recently phased out the death penalty for crimes such as pimping and counterfeiting.

(source: newser.com)






INDONESIA:

Bali drug convicts safe for now


The executions of 5 drug convicts in Indonesia this month will reportedly not include 2 Australians being held in Bali.

More than 60 people are sitting on death row in Indonesian prisons, but only 5 people have exhausted their legal appeals.

"They will be executed after a letter from the attorney-general is signed by the president," the co-ordinating minister for political, legal and security affairs, Tedjo Edi Purdjianto, said.

Australians Andrew Chan and Myuran Sukumaran, members of the Bali 9, have had a clemency request before the president for more than 2 years.

The Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade has been contacted seeking further information.However, the Jakarta Globe quoted Basuni Masyarif, Indonesia's deputy attorney-general for general crimes, as saying 2 of the 5 prisoners to be executed before the end of the year are Nigerians.

He said all 5 were in prisons away from Bali - ruling out Chan and Sukumaran, who are being held in the island's Kerobokan jail.

Basuni also told the Globe the government will execute at least 10 prisoners each year, to reduce the backlog of people who have been handed the death penalty.

(source: Sky News)

****************

Nusron's top priority: Migrant workers on death row


The new head of the Agency for the Placement and Protection of Indonesian Migrant Workers (BNP2TKI), Nusron Wahid, will have quite a handful of challenges after taking over for Gatot Abdullah Mansyur.

Inaugurated by President Joko "Jokowi" Widodo last Thursday, Nusron now shoulders the burden of keeping Jokowi's promise of prioritizing the protection of migrant workers, while overcoming criticism that the agency is not doing enough to tackle the exploitation of our "foreign-exchange heroes".

Nusron, leader of the Ansor Youth Movement (GP Ansor), the youth wing of Indonesia???s largest Muslim organization, Nahdlatul Ulama (NU), is a Golkar Party politician who was removed from his post on a key commission in the House of Representatives, allegedly for openly endorsing Jokowi and his running mate, Jusuf Kalla, who is also a senior Golkar politician.

Regarding Nusron's appointment, Cabinet Secretary Andi Widjajanto cited his role in Jokowi's presidential election campaign in addition to his concern for migrant workers' protection. Reports on the exploitation and abuse of migrant workers were taken seriously by former president Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, who issued directives in 2011 to better protect their rights.

These included the imposition of a moratorium on sending workers to Saudi Arabia and the issuance of Presidential Decree No.17/2011 that established a task force to protect migrant workers under the threat of the death penalty. Indonesian missions abroad formed special teams tasked with, among other assignments, regularly visiting prisons and providing legal assistance to Indonesian nationals facing legal problems.

The directives were issued following the case of Ruyati binti Satubi, a 54-year-old migrant worker who in June 2011 was beheaded for allegedly killing her Saudi employer. The case triggered public anger after the government said it only found out about the case after the execution.

Critics maintain that protection measures need to be beefed up to end the exploitation of Indonesian workers. Anis Hidayah who leads the Migrant Care NGO said a task force to protect migrant workers from death penalty threats was only an ad hoc measure.

"This is also very wasteful because the task force???s main duties - such as identifying problems of migrant workers facing the death penalty and advocating and providing legal aid to workers undergoing the legal process or facing the death penalty - could have been handled by an Indonesian representative overseas," she told The Jakarta Post.

Concerns about the plight of migrant workers were raised by the human rights group, Amnesty International in September, which urged the government to pressure the Saudi Arabian government to lighten the sentence handed down to Siti Zainab binti Duhri Rupa, who is on death row for allegedly stabbing her employer to death in 1999.

At the top of Nusron's to-do list will be addressing death penalty threats currently facing some 280 migrant workers, despite the government's efforts to protect their rights.

Ongoing reports on discrimination, exploitation and abuse of migrant workers also highlighted disgraceful practices of recruitment, despite Law No.39/2004 on the placement of migrant workers and the ratification of the 1990 UN Convention on the Protection of Migrant Workers and their Families in May 2012.

The exploitation has persisted even as migrant workers continue to be a boon to their home countries. Last year, overseas remittances by some 6.5 million Indonesian migrant workers totaled Rp 88.6 trillion (US$7.26 billion) from January to December.

The law itself, said the NGO Solidaritas Perempuan (Women's Solidarity), was aimed primarily at regulating the dispatch of migrant workers by placement agencies rather than establishing a standard mechanism to ensure worker and employer rights and responsibilities.

Of 108 total articles in the law, only 4 regulate migrant workers' protection. Many critical roles played by the state - such as worker recruitment - are handed over to private companies. This has allowed scalpers to flourish; consequently, Indonesian migrant workers are seen as economic commodities rather than as Indonesian citizens and human beings entitled to state protection.

In 2004, the draft revision of the law was included in the 2005 National Legislation Program (Prolegnas) list. It was included again in the 2009 list, but no progress was made. Discussions on the draft revision began only after the government ratified the Convention on Migrant Workers in 2012, during which Yudhoyono issued a Presidential Mandate appointing several ministries to work together with their counterparts at the House to discuss the law's revision - with no significant progress made.

Despite efforts by NGOs, the future of the draft revision remains uncertain following the dissension of the House into 2 groups - the Red-and-White Coalition and the other led by the Indonesian Democratic Party of Struggle (PDI-P). Until the division is settled, the President has banned Cabinet ministers and related officials from attending any meetings with House lawmakers.

Without serious efforts to ease the tension, the government will prove for umpteenth time its reluctance to seriously address the discrimination, exploitation and abuse of millions of migrant workers.

******************

Execute death row convicts: President


President Joko "Jokowi" Widodo ordered on Thursday the execution of 5 death-row drug convicts this month, a move to uphold court rulings.

Jokowi summoned Coordinating Political, Legal and Security Affairs Minister Tedjo Edhy Purdijatno to a meeting to discuss the matter on Thursday.

Tedjo said it was not a unilateral decision by Jokowi, merely the President's instruction to implement the convicts' sentences.

"The President has ordered the relevant authorities to carry out the court verdicts. Those [sentences] which have legally binding rulings should be implemented," Tedjo said.

The government is now waiting for the newly inaugurated attorney general, HM Prasetyo, to complete the paperwork required for the death sentence on the 5 convicts to be carried out.

Prasetyo recently announced that 20 other death-row inmates, the majority of whom are drug convicts, would face the firing squad in 2015.

Former president Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono's administration had been repeatedly criticized for its lenience toward drug trafficking. In February, for example, it granted parole to Schapelle Corby, a convicted Australian drug trafficker who had been sentenced to 20 years for attempting to smuggle 4.2 grams of marijuana through Bali???s Ngurah Rai International Airport.

Human rights watch dog Imparsial, however, has just recently reaffirmed its stance against the death penalty.

The most recent executions in Indonesia took place in 2013, when the Attorney General's Office took the lives of drug smuggler Adam Wilson in March, 3 convicted murderers in Cilacap prison in May and a Pakistani drug smuggler in November.

Indonesia has 11 laws that carry the death sentence, including the Criminal Code, Law No. 12/1951 on firearm ownership, Law No. 11/PNPS 1963 on subversive activities, Law No. 5/1997 on drugs, Law No. 31/1999 on corruption eradication, Law No. 26/2000 on human rights courts, Law No. 23/2002 on children's protection and Law No. 15/2003 on terrorism. (++++)

(source for both: Jakarta Post)






SAUDI ARABIA----execution

Syrian is 75th person executed in Saudi Arabia this year


Saudi Arabia Wednesday executed a Syrian convicted of drug smuggling, bringing to 75 the number of locals and foreigners beheaded in the kingdom this year despite international concerns.

The sentence against Ridwan Awad Mohammed Awad was carried out in the city of Qurayyat near the border with Jordan, the interior ministry said.

He was caught trying to smuggle "a large amount" of amphetamine pills into the kingdom, added the statement on the official Saudi Press Agency (SPA).

The interior ministry said this week that authorities had seized more than 41 million amphetamine tablets during the Islamic calendar year that ended in October.

It also said nearly 1,600 Saudis and foreigners were arrested for drug-related crimes between February and September.

The oil-rich Gulf state saw the third highest number of executions in the world last year after Iran and Iraq, according to Amnesty International whose figures did not include China.

Rape, murder, apostasy and armed robbery are also punishable by death under the kingdom's strict version of Islamic sharia law.

In September, an independent expert working on behalf of the United Nations expressed concern about the judicial process in Saudi Arabia and called for an immediate moratorium on the death penalty.

(source: The Daily Star)



EGYPT:

Rights groups slam Egypt over new mass death sentence----Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch lash out at Egypt after a Cairo court sentenced 188 supporters of ousted Islamist President Mohamed Morsi to death Tuesday

Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International slammed Egypt Wednesday over the mass death sentencing of 188 Islamists days after murder charges were dropped against former President Hosni Mubarak.

A Cairo court sentenced 188 supporters of ousted Islamist President Mohamed Morsi to death Tuesday over the killing of 13 policemen in a village on the outskirts of Cairo on 14 August 2013.

The defendants were found guilty of killing the officers in Kerdassa on the day security forces forcibly dispersed two pro-Morsi protest camps in Cairo in an operation that left hundreds of demonstrators dead.

"Mass death sentences are fast losing Egypt's judiciary whatever reputation for independence it once had," Sarah Leah Whitson, HRW's Middle East and North Africa director, said in a statement.

"Instead of weighing the evidence against each person, judges are convicting defendants en masse without regard for fair trial standards."

Egyptian courts have sentenced hundreds of Morsi supporters to lengthy jail terms and many to death after speedy mass trials, which the United Nations called "unprecedented in recent history".

The government crackdown on Morsi supporters since the army ousted him on 3 July last year has resulted in at least 1,400 people dead and thousands jailed.

Several leaders of the Muslim Brotherhood, including Morsi, are themselves on trial in cases which carry the death penalty if convicted.

Amnesty International also lashed out at Tuesday's mass sentencing.

"It is quite telling that the sentencing... was handed down in the same week that the case against former president Hosni Mubarak was dropped," said Hassiba Hadj Sahrouai, deputy director for the Middle East and North Africa.

"This is blatantly a case of justice being meted out based on a political whim."

The European Union too shared its "serious concerns" over Tuesday's ruling, adding that it will follow such cases of mass death sentencing "very closely".

"The EU reiterates its call on the Egyptian judicial authorities to ensure, in line with international standards, the defendants' rights to a fair and timely trial based on clear charges and proper and independent investigations," Catherine Ray, spokeswoman for EU foreign affairs chief Federica Mogherini said in a statement.

A Cairo court on Saturday dismissed murder and corruption charges against Mubarak and 7 aides in a case involving the deaths of some of the roughly 800 demonstrators killed during the 2011 revolt that ended the veteran leader's 3-decades-old rule.

The prosecution has filed an appeal against the Mubarak verdict.

(source: Middle East Eye)






PAKISTAN:

Families in Pakistan mourn drug mules beheaded in Saudi


Every morning, Haji Abdul Haq wakes up wondering whether his son has been beheaded. Not by the Taliban, al Qaeda or the Islamic State group, but by the Saudi Arabian government.

Haq's son is on death row in the kingdom, waiting for his name to be added to the growing roll of Pakistanis executed this year by the Saudis for heroin smuggling.

Saudi Arabia has meted out the gruesome fate to 74 people in 2014, 15 of them Pakistanis convicted of drug smuggling.

Families and rights campaigners complain their trials are opaque and unfair, and accuse the Pakistani government of doing nothing to help its citizens, afraid of offending an important and hugely wealthy ally.

Haq's son Mohammad Irfan, 27, awaits his death in the Saudi prison of al Ha'ir, thousands of miles from the orange groves and wheatfields of his native Punjab, where his father told AFP his story.

4 years ago, Haq said, 2 men came and said that for $2,000 they would get Irfan plane tickets and a visa for the Gulf - for many poor Pakistanis, a passport to a better life.

Irfan sold his rickshaw and wife's jewels and his tea-seller father made up the rest of the money.

The 2 men then took Irfan to Karachi - a key transit point for heroin from Afghanistan. But in Karachi, things turned sour, Haq says.

"The 2 men changed and told him they would kill him unless he did what they wanted," Haq told AFP.

"After that they forced capsules of heroin into his anus."

Irfan was put on a flight to Saudi Arabia by his new masters. On arrival in Riyadh he was stopped by customs officers and after a brisk trial, condemned to death.

Pakistan is full of stories about drug mules, but they are little discussed in public and get little sympathy.

One official told AFP that "in most of the cases the sentence or the punishment is justified."

Rights group Amnesty International says Saudi Arabia uses the death penalty disproportionately against foreigners, particularly those from South Asia. Since 1985 around 1/2 of 2,000 people executed in the kingdom have been foreigners.

The Justice Project Pakistan (JPP), a human rights law firm, has begun trying to get Islamabad to defend them.

"These prisoners are very poor men who have been sold a chance to escape and make something of their lives," Sohail Yafat, a JPP investigator, told AFP.

Almost 1/2 of Afghanistan's heroin production comes through Pakistan on its way to Europe and Asia.

But in recent years the Gulf has become an increasingly important market, according to the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC).

Seizures of the drug in Saudi Arabia have exploded, from just one kilo (2.2 lbs) a year in the early 2000s to 41 kilos in 2008 and 111 in 2011, according to data given by the Saudis to the UN.

In August and September alone, nearly 400 people, including nearly 300 foreigners, were arrested for possessing or dealing heroin, according to the Saudi government.

Riyadh says it wants to protect Saudi society from the scourge of heroin, but rights groups are highly critical of its judicial system.

Sarah Leah Whitson of Human Rights Watch says the absence of a penal code in Saudi Arabia makes it particularly arbitrary.

"There is no law that defines what is and is not a crime - it is really up to the judge to decide what is a crime and what level of evidence is required to establish that a crime occurred," she told AFP.

The prisoners and their families also criticise the government for sacrificing its own citizens for the sake of good relations with an ally.

Saudi Arabia supplies oil and financial aid to Pakistan, while Pakistan helps with military assistance, according to analysts.

"In the perspective of the government, the relations with Saudi Arabia are too important, too critical, to be sacrificed for individuals who, in the mind of the state, are responsible" for their acts, said analyst Ayesha Siddiqa.

Haji Abdul Haq has written to numerous Pakistani officials including Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif, urging them to lobby the Saudis on behalf of his son.

"The drugs mafia, it's like a tree - the Saudis are cutting the branches but the trunk and the roots are still there," said Haq, sitting with Irfan's 2 daughters. One of the girls has never seen her father.

(source: The Express Tribune)






IRAN:

Public executions in Iran


When it comes to number of executions, Iran has the dubious distinction of being number 2 on the list of countries with highest number of death penalties, right after China, according to many online sources including the Guardian, http://www.theguardian.com/world/datablog/2014/mar/27/death-penalty-statistics-2013-by-country. Given the fact that the Chinese population is almost 18 times that of Iran's population, Iran succeeds China when it comes to the number of executions per million, which is currently about 8. As horrifying as it is, we often see shocking pictures of public executions in Iran showing people of all ages assembled in a public location as if they are attending a party and watching, many of them in dismay, a man or a woman being executed in an inhumane way. Guilty or not, even criminals deserve dignity and their execution should not be used as a means of intimidation and glorification of violence especially in the presence of children.

These pictures are reminiscent of "lynching" in the United States and remind me of how Iran has descended to early 19th century America in which lynching - "the practice of killing [black] people by extrajudicial mob action" - was mostly practiced. Since then, America has come a long way. Now, it has a black president.

I think the young Iranians are astonished at the way members of previous generation failed in their judgment when they voted the current regime into power and their lack of commitment to common good, and human rights and dignity. The future generations of Iranians will be embarrassed the same way the current Americans are embarrassed by the actions of their ancestors. We will also embarrass our children if we remain silent about injustice and lack of respect for human rights. We are tired of seeing our beloved country of Iran is being persistently portrayed by the images like this. Sharing them on virtual domain perhaps displease some people. However, if it wasn't for the information-sharing on social media, we would still have a theocratic dictatorship in Iraq, Egypt, Afghanistan and many other countries.

There are many countries, including the United States, in which capital punishment is allowed by the legal system. However, it is reserved only for the most heinous crimes and as the lender of last resort and when such punishment fits the crime without a reasonable doubt. Plus, the death penalty should be carried out in the most dignifying and humane manner.

Basing the judicial system of a country on religious laws creates a huge quandary because concern for human rights and welfare is often undermined and sacrificed for dogmatic and obsolete beliefs. Such an approach should not have any place in the 21st century, that is renowned for its attention to human rights and life.

Just as there are no such things as Christian Mathematics, Jewish Computer Science, or Islamic Chemistry, there should not be such a thing as an Islamic justice system. In reality, any religious-based judicial system is nothing more than whimsical man-made impositions wrapped in religious sacredness. A modern judicial system should reflect the realities of the society and the time. Morality should be developed based on science and reason, not medieval values. And, if we are really concerned with human dignity, subjecting people, including criminals, to suffering, torture, public humiliation, and demoralization is not going to diminish the level of crime as indicated by yearly crime statistics in Iran. On the contrary, it breeds more crimes and violent acts.

(source: Reza Varjavand; iranian.com)

*******************

43 prisoners executed in 9 days


During the past 9 days at least 43 prisoners, including 2 women and a juvenile offender, have been hanged in Iran.

The surge in executions follows 2 developments with high potential for prompting public expressions of anger against the regime: firstly, the failure of Iran nuclear talks in reaching a comprehensive deal and secondly an increase of over 30 % in the price of bread, the main nourishment for the vast majority of Iranian people.

The majority of the 43 executions carried out between November 24 and December 2 have been carried out in secret without public acknowledgement from the authorities.

On December 2, 11 prisoners were executed in Ghezel Hesar Prison in the city of Karaj. One of those executed was a woman and her husband as well as a citizen of Afghanistan. This was the 5th series of mass executions in recent weeks is this prison.

A large group of prisoners in Section 2 of the prison began a hunger strike on December 1 to protest against mass executions and to stop the execution of their cellmates. The prison chief threatened them, claiming that if they continue their protest, he will execute 200 people.

On the same day, December 2, 4 prisoners including one woman, in the central prison in the city of Orunieh and 3 other detainees in Bandar Abbas prison, were executed.

On November 28 two prisoners were executed in the cities of Ardabil and Qom.

On November 27, 3 prisoners were publicly executed in the cities of Mashhad and Jaghtay. The prisoner executed in Jaghtay - in Khorasan province - was a 20-year-old young man who was executed despite receiving clemency from the family of the murdered victim.

On Wednesday November 26, 5 prisoners were executed together in Karaj Gohardasht prison, 2 prisoners including a 23 year old in Qazvin prison and another prisoner in Sari prison.

On November 25, a group of 10 prisoners were hanged in Karaj Ghezel Hesar prison.

On the same day, henchmen hanged Rahim Nourallah-Zadeh, a young prisoner who was only 14 years old at the time of his arrest, in Tabriz prison. At least 4 other juvenile offenders have been executed in recent months in this prison. Fardin Jafarian, Ahad Akbari, Behnam Hakim Khani and Mohsen Moghadam were all less than 18 years old at the time of arrest.

On November 24, a prisoner was executed in the central prison in the city of Kashan.

Furthermore, in the 3rd week of November, in the city of Cheram in the province of Kohgilouye and Boyerahmad, state security forces flogged 4 people.

Silence and inaction by the international community against inhuman punishment and arbitrary mass executions in Iran has emboldened the ruling clerical dictatorship to continue with violations of human rights.

This regime must be rejected from the community of nations for its crimes against humanity and the dossier of its crimes must be referred to the United Nations Security Council and its leaders must be brought to justice.

(source: Secretariat of the National Council of Resistance of Iran)

******************************

Arabi death sentence under review


The Supreme Court of Iran is reviewing the death sentence issued for political prisoner Soheil Arabi, the judiciary has announced.

Gholamhossein Mohseni Ejei, the spokesman for the judiciary, reported on Tuesday December 2 that there is no discussion of granting Arabi a pardon; however, a request to review his file has been granted.

On November 30, Nastraran Naimi, Arabi's wife gave an interview to Zamaneh, saying she had requested a review of her husband's sentence and was optimistic a review would change it.

Last December, Soheil Arabi was arrested for criticizing Iranian government policies on his Facebook page. He was later sentenced to death for the charge of "insulting the prophet and sanctities."

AmirSalar Davoudi, one of Arabi's lawyers, has also called for a review of his case and expressed every hope that a review will overturn the sentence.

(source: Radio Zamaneh)

****************************

No sign of pardon for Iran blogger sentenced to death


On Dec. 1, the deputy head of Iran's judiciary, Gholam Ali Mohseni Ejei, responded to a reporter's question about Soheil Arabi, who was sentenced to death for Facebook posts deemed insulting to the Prophet Muhammad. Ejei said, "Currently, there is no pardon, and he's been convicted of 'corruption on Earth,' but there has been a request for his case to be reviewed again."

The deputy head of Iran's judiciary has said that there is no move to pardon blogger Soheil Arabi, sentenced to execution over Facebook comments, but there is a request to review his case.

According to the transcript provided by Islamic Republic News Agency, Mohseni Ejei did not elaborate further.

Many Iranian Facebook users became aware of Arabi's case on Nov. 24, when Iran's Supreme Court upheld the death sentence for Arabi, who was convicted in a Tehran criminal court with insulting the prophet. A Facebook page against Arabi's execution was set up to spread awareness about the case.

According to Arabi's lawyer, Vahid Moshkani Farahani, the Tehran court had originally sought the death penalty for Arabi for "insulting the prophet." When the Supreme Court reviewed the case, it upheld the ruling and added the "corruption on Earth" charge, which also carries the death penalty.

Arabi was arrested on November 2013 along with his wife Nastaran Naimi, who was soon released. Naimi made no public comments until the Supreme Court ruling, and has since pleaded in various interviews with foreign-based media outlets for her husband's life.

In an telephone interview with journalist Masih Alinejad, Naimi said when she last met with Arabi he was unaware of the Supreme Court ruling and she was forced to convey the news to him herself. She said that the court upheld the verdict over "merely 4 Facebook posts." Naimi said, "We're awaiting Islamic mercy" and added, "When the Prophet Muhammad was directly insulted, he would forgive it." She told Alinejad that she decided to break her year-long silence because after the Supreme Court ruling, she felt like she had nothing left to lose.

According to the Centre for Supporters of Human Rights, Arabi was arrested for "Facebook activities and having Facebook pages such as 'The generation that no longer wants to be the burnt generation.'???

Naimi told the center that her husband "was only a citizen and had no other activities." She said that the only evidence used against him was "printouts of Facebook pages" and "confessions that were attained under pressure from the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps."

According to Naimi, the printouts had no special significance and their contents were merely "copy-pasted." Naimi also said that there were others who had access to the Facebook pages who could have posted the items in question and criticized officials for not conducting expert analysis to determine which individual contributor to the page had posted the items.

The Revolutionary Guard Corps has recently become highly active in pursuing so-called "cyber crime" in Iran. In December 2013, the group announced it had arrested "cyber activists" in Kerman who had connections to foreigners.

(source: Al-Monitor)

*****************

Tens of Executions and Hunger Stikes in Ghezel-Hes'ar Prison


Prisoners at Unit 2 of Karaj Qezel Hesar Prison started a hunger strike in protest at tens of executions at this prison.

According to the report of Human Rights Activists News Agency (HRANA), during the last 2 weeks at least 44 death row prisoners at Unit 2 of Karaj Qezel Hesar Prison have been transferred to solitary confinements in groups of 11 people in preparation to be executed later.

The last group of these prisoners have been summoned to be sent to solitary confinements and to enforce their death sentence on the evening of December 2nd. "Ali Golyarani", "Yousef Fakhte", "Mansour Yadegari" and 2 people named "Salam" and "Behnam" are 5 names among these prisoners.

From, Monday 1 December 2014, prisoners at Unit 2 of this prison has started unlimited hunger strike all together in protest to these group executions.

There are about 3000 inmates at Unit2 (which is consisted of 9 halls) at Karaj Qezel Hesar Prison for drug related crimes and so far 1000 of them have been sentenced to death.

It is important to mention that Qezel Hesar Prison usually homes drug related criminals. It is one of the biggest prisons in the Middle East and there have been many reports about the unacceptable hygiene condition and ill treatments by the prison authorities at this prison.

During autumn, massive strikes by thousands of death row prisoners at Qezel Hesar Prison forced the Enforcement Office to suspend the executions for 6 months.

Further complimentary reports about this issue will be published soon.

(source: Human Rights Activists News Agency)

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