May 26


SUDAN:

Sudan pastor faces death penalty


A Christian human rights group is concerned that a Sudanese pastor could soon be facing the death penalty.

In December of last year, the African country of Sudan began a crackdown of church leaders and pastors which included several arrests. While 1 pastor was recently released, another pastor, Hassan Abduraheem Taour, remains jailed.

Troy Augustine, regional manager for Africa for International Christian Concern, says the pastor has been transferred to the attorney general's office.

"Which means that charges should be coming soon," Augustine explains. "But the charges that are likely to come down on Mr. Taour, 3 of which carry the possibility of the death penalty."

Augustine says they are working on the pastor's behalf.

"We're working on different advocacy efforts to bring this issue to the fore and say that this pastor's incarceration is unjust, and for him to face charges that seem to be trumped up is unjust," he says.

Augustine says they do have some hope though because in past similar situations, Sudan has responded positively to international pressure.

(source: onenewsnow.com)






INDONESIA:

Drug lord Freddy tries to avoid death


Amid the government's preparations for the next round of executions, convicted drug kingpin Freddy Budiman has filed a case review to overturn his death sentence.

On Wednesday, he and his team of lawyers attended a hearing for the case review at the Cilacap District Court in Central Java, amid reports he is one of the death-row convicts soon to be executed on Nusakambangan Island.

His lawyer Untung Sunaryo told the panel of judges, presided over by Catur Prasetyo, that his client should not have been sentenced to death because none of Freddy's accomplices, who were involved in the smuggling of 1.4 million ecstasy pills from China in 2011, was given the death penalty.

"Why was Freddy Budiman then sentenced to death while the others were not? This is the substance of the objection we've raised in this case review hearing. We demand our client not be put to death," said Untung at Cilacap District Court.

Freddy's case review hearing was tightly secured by around 150 police personnel from the Cilacap Regency Police. Police escorted Freddy from the ferry crossing from Nusakambangan Island to the Cilacap District Court, a distance of around 4 kilometers. Freddy wore a long white robe with black cap.

"We hope the Supreme Court will hear our case for a review as far as possible because the judges stated our client's offense was the same as his accomplices during a previous appeal hearing," said Untung.

The central government has remained silent on the upcoming executions despite apparent preparations on the island, in a move many see as trying to avoid animosity among the international community.

Central Java Police revealed that 10 foreign nationals and five Indonesians were already on the list, but the Attorney General???s Office ( AGO ) has denied this, with Attorney General Muhammad Prasetyo saying that his office had yet to decide when and who would be included in the next batch of executions.

Freddy has avoided execution at least twice as his lawyer team had kept postponing a plan to file for a case review.

Prasetyo said he expected Freddy would be included in the next round of executions, but he was still waiting for the convict to decide on whether to exercise his legal right to challenge the death sentence.

The hearing at Cilacap court was heard by 3 local judges--Catur and Vilia Sari and Cokia Ana Pontia, while the prosecutors were from the West Jakarta Prosecutor's Office.

The case review appeal was read by Freddy's legal advisors. The hearing commenced at around 10:30 a.m. local time and ended at 12 p.m..

Freddy's case review should have been heard in early May at the West Jakarta District Court. However, as Freddy had been transferred to Nusakambangan, his legal team requested the case review hearing be held in Cilacap and this was granted.

"As he's been transferred to the Pasir Putih prison, Freddy's legal team proposed the hearing be moved and it was finally approved to be held at the Cilacap District Court," West Jakarta prosecutor Reda Manthovani told journalists.

He said that although the hearing was at the Cilacap District Court, prosecutors convened the session from the West Jakarta Prosecutor's Office.

Freddy was arrested on April 28, 2011, by the Jakarta Police's narcotics division for smuggling 1.4 million ecstasy pills from China. Freddy was sentenced to death by the West Jakarta District Court five months after his arrest.

From November 2012 until July 2013, he was confined at the Cipinang Narcotics
Prison in East Jakarta. Although he was sentenced to death, Freddy did not give up drug dealing, as he carried on his activities from within his prison cell, he was therefore transferred to Batu Prison on Nusakambangan in July 2013. However, he allegedly still deals drugs in Nusakambangan.

(source: The Jakarta Post)






IRAN----executions

Collective hanging of 11 young men in Gohardasht Prison


The Iranian regime collectively hanged 11 young prisoners in Gohardasht (Rajai Shahr) Prison on May 25. 1 of those executed was only 16 at the time of his alleged crime. A day earlier, 5 prisoners were executed in Ghezel Hessar Prison of Karaj and Adelabad Prison of Shiraz. Another prisoner was also hanged in public in the city of Ramsar after spending 8 years in prison.

The Iranian Resistance calls on the UN Security Council, the European Union, the United States, as well as all international human rights organizations, particularly the High Commissioner for Human Rights, the Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights in Iran, the Special Rapporteur on extrajudicial and arbitrary executions, and unions and assemblies that defend the youths to condemn the antihuman clerical regime for these criminal executions. These crimes that take place concurrent with Western officials' relations with the Iranian regime demonstrate that these relations have emboldened the religious fascism ruling Iran in its brazen, brutal and systematic violation of human rights. Trade with the murderers of the Iranian people and dubbing them as 'moderates' has no meaning but collaboration in the human rights tragedy in Iran. This policy must cease and instead the leaders of the Iranian regime should be brought to justice in international tribunals.

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






UGANDA:

7 convicted over al-Shabab's deadly World Cup bombings


7 men have been convicted of carrying out twin bombings which killed 76 people who were watching the 2010 World Cup final in the Ugandan capital Kampala.

The men, who were also convicted of multiple counts of murder and attempted murder, could face the death penalty in sentencing on Friday.

Another suspect was convicted of aiding and abetting terrorism, while 5 others were acquitted.

In convicting the seven men, High Court Judge Alphonse Owiny Dollo said there was proof that the July 2010 bombings were planned in Somalia and that explosives used in the attack were ferried through Kenya.

The 13 suspects - including Ugandans, Kenyans and Tanzanians - were charged under Uganda's anti-terror law. FBI agents testified during the trial in Kampala.

1 of the convicts, a Ugandan named Issa Luyima, was identified as the mastermind of the attacks, the judge said in his decision. The suspects appeared calm throughout the session that lasted more than 5 hours.

The 2010 attacks targeted a rugby club and an Ethiopian-themed restaurant where customers were watching the World Cup final on giant screens.

A 3rd bomb planted elsewhere in Kampala failed to detonate.

The attacks were claimed by the Somali Islamic extremist group al-Shabab, which opposes Ugandan military involvement in Somalia.

The group has since carried out even deadlier attacks in neighboring Kenya, which in 2011 deployed peacekeepers to Somalia.

Al-Shabab, which has ties with al-Qaida, has been fighting to impose a strict version of Islam in Somalia, but the group's campaign of violence has been thwarted by the African peacekeepers deployed in support of Somalia's weak, Western-backed government.

(source: breakingnews.ie)

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