Oct. 27


IRAN:

At least 110 Executions will be Carried Out before 20 March 2017


According to the families of death-row prisoners who are detained in the central prison of Karaj, the prison authorities told them that the sentences of all those sentenced to death, about 110 to 120 people, will be implemented before the start of Iranian New Year on 20 March 2017 in the Central Prison of Karaj. The announcement caused panic and concerns among the prisoners and their families.

In addition, reports indicate that the guards in central prison of Karaj have transferred the death-row prisoners, particularly the prisoners incarcerated in Ward 5, to different wards of the prison.

The families say that prison official moved the death-row prisoners to different wards in order to prevent protests and rioting during their transfer for implementation of the sentences.

It should be pointed out that prison officials strongly fear protests inside the prisons, in particular prisons where there are high number of death-row prisoners. Because of this fear and in order to prevent protests, they often enter the prison cells unannounced and forcefully transfer the prisoners to solitary confinement first while handcuffing and shackling and blindfolding them before taking them for implementation of the death sentence.

(source: NCR-Iran)






PAKISTAN:

Pakistan president urged to halt Imdad Ali execution----Lawmakers and activists say man facing the gallows is a paranoid schizophrenic who does not deserve the death penalty.

A human rights committee in Pakistan's upper house of parliament has urged the government to halt the execution of a man diagnosed with schizophrenia that is planned for next week.

Lawmaker Farhatullah Babar said the committee will seek a pardon from President Mamnoon Hussain for 50-year-old Imdad Ali, a convicted killer who was diagnosed with the disease in 2008.

Thursday's development comes days after Pakistan's highest court rejected Ali's final appeal, claiming his illness does not qualify as a mental disorder.

Ali has been on death row since he was convicted in 2001 of murdering a religious scholar. He is to be executed on Wednesday.

Babar said the committee was taking action because 2 Pakistani brothers were "wrongfully hanged" last year while their appeals were still pending.

Ali's lawyers argue he should not be executed because he is unable to understand his crime, and doing so would violate the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, a UN treaty to which Pakistan is a signatory.

"Imdad's death will serve no retributive purpose as he remains completely unaware of this reality," said defence lawyer Sarah Belal in an emailed statement.

A government psychiatrist told Reuters news agency he had no doubt about Ali's mental condition.

"I have been treating this man for the last 8 years, and there is absolutely no room for doubt in this that he suffers from paranoid schizophrenia," said Tahir Feroze.

On October 20, hearing Ali's final appeal, Pakistan's Supreme Court ruled that schizophrenia is "not a permanent mental disorder" and, therefore, could not be defined as a mental illness.

With his execution date set, Ali's only hope of a reprieve is a pardon from President Hussain, who rejected an earlier mercy petition in May. Ali's legal team filed a new petition last month.

As a last resort, Ali's wife said she is seeking forgiveness for her husband from the family of the murder victim, which could avert his execution under a feature of Islamic law used in Pakistan.

"We are trying to contact them, but they are never available to us. We are trying to set a meeting," Safia Bano said.

Pakistan has hanged more than 400 convicts since a moratorium on executions was lifted in 2014.

Pakistan halted executions between 2008 and 2014 due to pressure from international human rights groups. But it lifted the moratorium following a Taliban attack on a school in Peshawar in December 2014 that killed 150 people, nearly all of them children.

Reprieve, a UK-based rights group that campaigns against the death-penalty, said 94 % of prisoners recently hanged in Pakistan "had nothing to do with terrorism".

Maya Foa, a director at the group, said: "These latest numbers show that the Pakistani government is using 'terrorism' as a smokescreen to execute vast numbers of prisoners - including innocent scapegoats, juveniles, and mentally ill prisoners like Imdad Ali."

(source: aljazeera.com)






SINGAPORE:

Woman charged with murder of 5-year-old son


A woman was charged in court on Thursday (Oct 27) with murdering her 5-year-old son together with her husband.

Azlin Arujunah, 24, is alleged to have caused the death of her son together with Ridzuan Mega Abdul Rahman, 24, at a flat in Lorong 1 Toa Payoh between Oct 17 and 22.

The prosecution applied for her to be remanded at Central police division for investigation.

She will be back in court on Nov 3.

On Monday (Oct 24), Ridzuan was charged with causing grievous hurt to the child by splashing hot water repeatedly on him between 12pm and 8.48pm last Saturday (Oct 22).

The boy died in KK Women's and Children's Hospital the next day.

Ridzuan has also been remanded and will appear in court on Monday (Oct 31).

The New Paper reported that the boy has three siblings, and his family moved into their rental flat about 2 years ago.

According to the Ministry of Social and Family Development, the 3 siblings have been placed in foster care temporarily by the Child Protective Service.

If convicted of murder, Azlin faces the death penalty.

(source: straitstimes.com)


_______________________________________________
A service courtesy of Washburn University School of Law www.washburnlaw.edu

DeathPenalty mailing list
DeathPenalty@lists.washlaw.edu
http://lists.washlaw.edu/mailman/listinfo/deathpenalty
Unsubscribe: http://lists.washlaw.edu/mailman/options/deathpenalty

Reply via email to