Aug. 24



IRAN----executions

2 Prisoners Executed in Southern Iran


A prisoner on death row for drug related charges was reportedly hanged at Sirjan Prison (Kerman province, southcentral Iran), and 1 prisoner was reportedly hanged at Bandar Abbas Prison (Hormozgan province, southern Iran) on unknown charges.

According to the unoffocial news source, Baloch Activists Campaign, a prisoner identified as Reza Naruee was hanged on the morning of Thursday August 18 on drug related charges. The group also reports on the execution of a prisoner, identified as Habib Jamalhezi (pictured below), at Bandar Abbas Prison on Sunday August 21 on unknown charges.

Iranian official sources, including the media and Judiciary, have been silent on these 2 executions.

Earlier, Iran Human Rights had reported on the public execution of 2 prisoners at Saheli Boulevard in Bandar Abbas on rape charges.The executions were reportedly carried out on the morning of Wednesday August 17 in front of a crowd of people.

(source: NCR-Iran)






BANGLADESH:

Annul death sentence for Mir Quasem Ali----A group of UN human rights experts urges Bangladesh


A group of United Nations human rights experts yesterday urged the Bangladesh government to annul the death sentence of Jamaat-e-Islami central executive council member Mir Quasem Ali and to retry him in compliance with international standards.

Quasem was sentenced to death in 2014 by the International Crimes Tribunal for crimes against humanity committed during the Liberation War in 1971. The decision was upheld by the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court in March this year.

The experts' request has come as the SC prepares to hear the review appeal of Quasem today, according to a UN press release issued in Geneva yesterday.

"Ali's trial and appeal processes were reportedly marred with irregularities and failed to meet international standards on fair trial and due process for the imposition of the death penalty," noted the UN experts on extrajudicial executions, independence of the judiciary, torture, arbitrary detention and enforced disappearances.

"International law, accepted as binding by Bangladesh, provides that capital punishment may only be imposed following trials that comply with the most stringent requirements of fair trial and due process, or could otherwise be considered an arbitrary execution," they cautioned.

The UN human rights experts also expressed alarm at reports that Quasem's son and part of his legal defence team, Mir Ahmed Bin Quasem, was abducted from his home on August 9 by Bangladeshi security forces, two weeks before his father's review hearing.

"We understand that no information has been given on where he is being held, by whom or under what suspicion or charge. We urge the authorities to immediately disclose the whereabouts of Mir Quasem [Mir Ahmed Bin Quasem]," they said.

The experts are: Agnes Callamard, new UN Special Rapporteur on extrajudicial, summary or arbitrary executions; Monica Pinto, UN Special Rapporteur on the independence of judges and lawyers; Juan E Mendez, UN Special Rapporteur on torture and other cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment; Setondji Roland Adjovi, current chairperson of the UN Working Group on Arbitrary Detention; and the UN Working Group on Enforced or Involuntary Disappearances.

(source: The Daily Star)






ETHIOPIA:

Reprieve writes to Boris Johnson over British citizen's Ethiopian detention


Human rights group Reprieve has written to Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson in support of a British citizen on death row in Ethiopia, who they say continues to be refused access to a lawyer.

Andargachew Tsege, a prominent opposition political activist, was abducted by Ethiopian security forces from an international airport in 2014 and has been detained under an in absentia death sentence since then.

In June, then-Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond announced that he "received a commitment from the Prime Minister that Mr Tsege will be allowed access to independent legal advice".

However, Reprieve, which is assisting Mr Tsege, says that he has not received legal access and has even been denied even the writing materials he would need to request a lawyer.

Reprieve wrote to Mr Johnson on 11 August to alert him to the latest developments, but has yet to receive a reply.

Maya Foa, director of the death penalty team at Reprieve, said: "Andy was illegally sentenced to death while living in London, illegally kidnapped and rendered to Ethiopia where he has been held in unlawful detention for over 2 years.

"Not only are the Ethiopian authorities refusing him a lawyer - they won't even provide pen and paper so he can request one.

"The British Government must now recognise that Ethiopia is not serious about the rule of law, and demand that Andy is released immediately from his unlawful detention and returned to his family in London."

(source: irishlegal.com)






PAKISTAN:

Christian Mother of 5 Asia Bibi's Death Sentence Appeal Date Finally Set by Pakistan's Supreme Court


Imprisoned Christian mother of of 5, Asia Bibi, is facing the death penalty after being accused of blasphemy in 2009 by angry Muslim women, who were upset that she drank from the same drinking water as them.

Pakistan's Supreme Court has finally set a court date for the final appeal hearing for Asia Bibi, a Christian mother of 5 who was sentenced to death in 2010 on accusations of blasphemy.

According to the Christian persecution watchdog agency International Christian Concern, Bibi, also known as Aasiya Noreen, will have her final appeal heard before the country's highest court during the second week in October.

"The Chief Justice [of] Pakistan has ordered that Asia Bibi's appeal be fixed in the second week of October for final hearing," Bibi's Supreme Court lawyer Saif-Ul-Malook told ICC. "I will appear before the Supreme Court of Pakistan and argue her case while she will remain in prison. I hope [the] result will be an acquittal."

Bibi's blasphemy allegation stems from an altercation in June 2009 that she had with a group of Muslim women in the town of Sheikhupura in the Punjab province. As the women were picking berries, a Muslim women became enraged when Bibi drank from the same water bowl that the Muslim women drank out of.

Since Bibi was a Christian, the women considered her unclean. After an argument between the women ensued, the Muslim women went to the police and accused Bibi of saying something along the lines of "My Christ died for me, what did Muhammad do for you?"

As Bibi has been sitting in prison for over 6 years, reports have indicated that the health of the 51-year-old mother has been deteriorating. A report from last June indicated that Bibi has had trouble walking and has also vomited up blood inside of her jail cell.

As the blasphemy law in Pakistan is often abused by Muslims to settle personal scores with Christians and other religious minorities, international religious freedom advocates have asserted that the charge against Bibi is trumped up and have called for the Pakistani government to immediately release her. The daughters of Asia Bibi with an image of their mother, standing outside their residence in Sheikhupura on November 13, 2010. Bibi originally appealed her death sentence to the Lahore High Court. After her appeal was delayed a total of seven times, the High Court finally held her hearing in October 2014. The death sentence was upheld.

After appealing to the Supreme Court, the court agreed last July to hear Bibi's case and suspended her death sentence.

"The case against Asia Bibi is one of the best examples of how Christians are abused in Pakistan by radicals wielding Pakistan's controversial blasphemy laws," ICC's Regional Manager for South Asia William Stark said in a statement. "Threats from Islamic radical groups and general discrimination against Christians in Pakistan have transformed courts into little more than rubber stamps for blasphemy accusations brought against Christians, regardless of the evidence brought to bear in the case."

Should the Supreme Court uphold Bibi's death sentence, the only thing that can legally spare her from execution is a pardon from Pakistan's President Mamnoon Hussain.

"As a devout Christian she continues to believe God will free her from her ignominious incarceration. She prays daily and has placed her life and her family before God," Wilson Chowdhry, president of the London-based charity British Pakistani Christian Association, told The Christian Post.

"I have spoken to Pakistani government officials and the judiciary," he added. "All I have spoken to are shocked at the ongoing abuse of her liberty. Yet, her tragedy continues and I have come to the conclusion that all I have been receiving is diplomatic lip service, devoid of passion for justice."

BPCA has an online petition set up in support of Bibi, calling on the British government to use its influences to to pressure the Pakistani government to dismiss the case against Bibi and set her free. The petition has been signed by over 12,000 people.

"Freedom for Asia Bibi would be a watershed moment in the campaign for justice and freedom for minorities. Previous governments have failed miserably, but I believe the incumbent government is genuinely attempting to return the balance," Chowdhry continued. "I hope that effective protection is provided to Asia and her family, the judiciary and all persons that could make this latest appeal a success. Any half-hearted approach will undermine Asia's trial and create a blight on Pakistan's reputation."

According to Open Doors USA's World Watch List, Pakistan is ranked as the 6th worst country in the world when it comes to the persecution of Christians.

(source: Christian Post)



THAILAND:

Spaniard Artur Segarra Prepares Defense after Demanding Change of Lawyer


Spanish national Artur Segarra, sole accused in the murder of fellow national David Bernat in the Thai capital, on Tuesday went to the courts to examine the evidence against him in the case, following his demand for a change of his court-appointed lawyer.

On Aug. 10 the accused asked the Rachadapisek Criminal Court to change his lawyer owing to discrepancies at the time of preparing his defense strategy and canceled a 2nd meeting scheduled for the next day with his current legal representative, Kasem Pahungmahaka.

The judge will decide Tuesday during a meeting whether he will accept or deny the request of Segarra.

Segarra has pleaded not guilty and denied the 13 charges against him on 2 occasions. If found guilty of premeditated murder, he may be awarded the death penalty.

On Oct. 17, Segarra will appear in court for a preparatory hearing of the trial, which will begin on Dec. 1 and is expected to continue until February.

The Prosecutor's office has 23 days to record the statements of the 95 witnesses and present the evidence that proves the crime while Segarra's lawyers will get 1 day - Feb. 24 - for Segarra's testimony and defense.

Segarra is facing charges of kidnapping, robbery, extortion, falsification of documents, destruction of evidence, murder and the subsequent dismembering of Bernat's body.

According to police, investigators found traces of Bernat's blood in a plumbing pipe in the flat Segarra had rented in Bangkok and where the murder is believed to have taken place.

The police also found numerous images of Segarra and Bernat together before the latter disappeared, as well as video footage of him stealing cash from the victim and buying material with which he is believed to have committed the alleged crime.

The first parts of Bernat's corpse were found floating in the Chao Phraya River, which runs through Bangkok, around 10 days after he arrived in Thailand on Jan. 19 from Iran, where he often went on business trips. It is believed he was kidnapped by Segarra a day later.

Segarra was arrested on Feb. 7 in Sihanoukville, Cambodia, where he had fled 2 days earlier and was handed over to Thai authorities a day later.

(source: Latin American Herald Tribuine)






MALAYSIA:

Extend moratorium on executions to all offences, urges Madpet


Malaysians Against Death Penalty and Torture (Madpet) is happy that Malaysia has in place a moratorium on executions, especially for those languishing on death row for drug trafficking.

Edmund Bon Tai Soon, Malaysia's current Asean Intergovernmental Commission on Human Rights representative, was recently reported saying, "Malaysia's moratorium, I understand, is only for drug trafficking cases" (The Star, 10 July 2016).

It must be noted that the Human Rights Commission of Malaysia (Suhakam) also reiterated on 29 March 2016 their recommendation that a moratorium on the use of the death penalty be put in place in Malaysia.

Madpet is of the opinion that this positive development should not be kept secret but should have long been proudly announced by the Malaysian government. In fact, Nancy Shukri, the de facto law minister, should have proudly announced Malaysia's moratorium on executions when she took the stage at the 6th World Congress Against Death Penalty in Malaysia.

At the said Congress in Oslo, Norway on 21 June 2016, the minister in the prime minister's department, did state that Malaysia would soon be amending laws to do away with the mandatory death penalty.

Although no time frame was mentioned, Madpet and others have called that these long overdue amendments be tabled at the upcoming sitting of Parliament in October 2016. In November 2015, the same minister had said that the amendments would be tabled in the March 2016 sitting of Parliament.

Madpet urges Malaysia to extend the moratorium on executions to all persons on death row, not just those convicted for drug trafficking. This only makes sense, since Malaysia is now in the process of abolishing the death penalty, beginning with the mandatory death penalty.

In May 2016, Malaysia disclosed that there were 1,041 persons on death row. Based on the statistics revealed in 2011, when the number on death row was 696 (as at 22 February 2011), 479 (69 %) were for drug trafficking, 204 (29 %) were for murder and 13 (2 %) for illegal processions of arms. It looks like almost all those who may be on death row are there for mandatory death penalty offences.

There are at least 10 offences in Malaysian laws that carry the mandatory death penalty; only three are for offences that result in the death of the victim - murder [sec 302, Penal Code], terrorist acts where the act results in death [sec 130C (1)(a), Penal Code]; and hostage-taking where the act results in death [sec. 374(a) Penal Code].

For all the other mandatory death penalty offences, death does not result, namely drug trafficking (sec 39B, Dangerous Drugs Act 1952) and 6 types of offences listed in the schedule of the Firearms (Increased Penalties) Act 1971, which include robbery, kidnapping, extortion and house trespass.

The existence of the mandatory death penalty for offences that do not result in death, such as in the Firearms (Increased Penalties) Act 1971, only unnecessarily increases the risk of victims and/or witnesses to these crimes being killed by perpetrators to avoid the mandatory death penalty.

Malaysia's moratorium on execution will be most welcome by everyone including the international community, as it will be seen to be in compliance with the now 5 existing United Nations General Assembly resolutions, the 1st in 2007 and the last being in 2014, which called for "a moratorium on executions with a view to abolishing the death penalty".

Every time, these resolutions have been tabled, the number of countries that have voted in favour has been increasing, demonstrating that the global trend is towards abolition.

Malaysia has every reason to be proud of the fact that it has been considering abolition and has in fact carried out serious studies, which have now been concluded, and will be soon be taking the 1st step by abolishing the mandatory death penalty.

Attorney General Apandi Ali, also the public prosecutor, is also for the scraping of the mandatory death penalty, and he was reported as saying in 2015, that the "mandatory death sentences were a 'paradox', as it robbed judges of their discretion to impose sentences on convicted criminals".

Madpet also urges Edmund Bon to emulate his predecessor, Muhammad Shafee Abdullah, in publicly declaring his personal position for the abolition of the death penalty. The AICHR representatives should also at the very least take a stand for the abolition of the death penalty in Asean, as had been done by the Human Rights Commission of Malaysia (Suhakam).

Madpet urges Malaysia to immediately extend the moratorium on executions to all, not just only for those convicted for drug trafficking.

Madpet urges that Malaysia tables in the upcoming sitting of the Malaysian Parliament in October 2016, amendments and/or legislation that will see the abolition of the mandatory death penalty; and MADPET urges Malaysia to abolish the death penalty.

(source: aliran.com)




VIETNAM:

Man who killed, cut up brother's wife gets death sentence


A court in Ho Chi Minh City on Wednesday sentenced a man to death for killing his sister-in-law and dismembered her body in 2014.

Dang Van Tuan, 42, was charged with strangling Bui My Hanh, 43, to death in September 2014. He then mutilated her body with a knife in their house in District 1, HCMC, and dumped the parts in different streets.

Tuan had moved into the home of his brother Dang Van Thanh and his common-law wife Hanh in March 2014, after serving a 7-year prison term for pushing drug.

Tuan and Hanh, who were both methamphetamine addicts, soon were engaged in an illicit affair.

In August 2014, however, they had conflict after Hanh found out Tuan had an intimate relationship with another woman. They were often involved in heated quarrels.

Tuan said at the trial that on Sep. 28, 2014, when they were alone using drug at home, Hanh continued to insult him and threatened to have thugs attack him and his relatives.

Tuan said he went mad and hit her in the head with a kitchen pestle. Hanh fell on her back but was still alive. Tuan strangled her to death.

He then slashed his wrists in a suicide attempt but failed.

Tuan said he "covered Hanh's body with a blanket and continued to stay and used meth in the house for 2 more days."

On Sep. 30, Tuan dismembered Hanh's corpse and placed the parts in several plastic sacks. Early the next day, he dumped them at the mouth of a nearby alley on Vo Van Kiet St., and buried Hanh's head under a bridge in District 6, before returning home.

Residents in the alley discovered the dismembered corpse in the same morning and reported to local police. As the news spread, Tuan's neighbors also reported to the police about the suspicious stench emanating from his house.

When they arrived at Tuan's house, he again attempted to commit suicide by slashing his wrists, but were saved by the police.

In his last words at the trial, Tuan said he knew he was guilty, and so it was fair that "a life for a life." He appologized to Hanh's mother and insisted that the court hand him the death penalty.

(source: Thanh Nien News)

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

2 Vietnamese drug traffickers get death sentence


A Vietnamese court on Tuesday handed down 2 death sentences and 6 life imprisonment sentences on local drug traffickers.

The Ho Chi Minh City People's Court gave the death sentences to 29-year-old Tran Tuan An and 30-year-old Le Nguyen Hoang Anh. The court also handed down life imprisonment sentences to 6 local people, and jail terms of 3 to 20 years to 6 other defendants.

According to the indictment, from March to June 2013, the 14 defendants bought and sold 213 cakes of heroin weighing over 70 kg in some provinces and cities.

According to Vietnamese law, those convicted of smuggling over 600 grams of heroin or more than 2.5 kilograms of methamphetamine are punishable by death. Making or trading 100 grams of heroin or 300 grams of other illegal drugs also faces death penalty.

(source: Xinhua News)


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