PGLO Rejects View that Hanged Teens were Rapists.
Support for OutRage!’s Five Demands.
24 Cities Protest Against Iran’s Homophobic Persecution.
London – 14 July 2006
“The Persian Gay and Lesbian Organisation endorses the worldwide 19 July protests, which commemorate the execution of gay lovers Mahmoud Asgari and Ayaz Marhoni and condemn the Iranian regime’s persecution of its gay and lesbian citizens,” said Arsham Parsi, secretary of Iran’s leading gay organisation, the PGLO.
New information obtained from sources inside Iran by Afdhere Jama, editor of the queer Muslim magazine Huriyah, confirm that the Mahmoud and Ayaz were lovers not rapists, and that they were hanged because of their homosexuality (see below).
“We urge cities all over the world to show solidarity with our freedom struggle. Your solidarity is tremendously important and effective,” added Mr Parsi.
“It is very distressing to witness the way some leading human rights groups have been hood-winked by the homophobic culture both inside and outside Iran. They have chosen to believe the propaganda waged against gay human rights, rather than gay victims and gay groups like PGLO.
“We feel great pain when we see human rights advocates ignoring the evidence and failing to speak out against the torture and execution of gay people in our country.
“We know first-hand, from the violent abuse of our members and supporters, that the jailing, flogging and hanging of gay people is official state law and policy.
“Sources in Iran have confirmed that the two youths executed in Mashhad last July were lovers, not child rapists. We are convinced they were hanged because they were gay.
“We are very disappointed that some people prefer to believe the story of Iranian officials about these two teens that is geared towards defaming the character of the murdered boys.
“PGLO supports OutRage!’s five demands to ensure justice for gay Iranians,” said Mr. Parsi.
Further information: Arsham Parsi [email protected] or [email protected]
The common, universal demand of all the 19 July protests worldwide is:
Iran : Stop Killing Gays! Stop Killing Kids!
The British LGBT organisation OutRage! has proposed an additional five demands for the 19 July protests, which local protests are free to adopt or not. These five demands have been endorsed by the PGLO. They are:
1. End all executions in Iran, especially the execution of minors.
2. Stop the arrest, torture and imprisonment of Iranian lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people and repeal the Iranian penal code’s criminalisation of same-sex relationships.
3. Halt the deportation to Iran of LGBT asylum seekers and other victims of Tehran’s persecution.
4. Support Iranians struggling for democracy, social justice and human rights.
5. Oppose foreign military intervention in Iran ; regime change must come from within – by and for the Iranian people themselves.
To mark the first anniversary of Iran’s hanging of two gay teenagers, Mahmoud Asgari and Ayaz Marhoni, in the city of Mashhad on 19 July 2005, gay campaign groups OutRage! and IDAHO have declared 19 July 2006 an International Day of Action Against Homophobic Persecution in Iran (IDAAHOPI) and called for global protests against the homophobic Iranian regime.
The global protests are backed by the International Lesbian & Gay Association.
Shocking new revelations concerning the executions follow below.
Photos of the hanging of Mahmoud Asgari and Ayaz Marhoni:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/outrage/sets/72157594175121502/
19 July protests are confirmed in 24 cities worldwide: Amsterdam, Berlin, Brussels, Chicago, Fort Lauderdale, Frankfurt, London, Marseilles, Mexico City, Moscow, New York, Provincetown, Sacramento, San Diego, San Francisco, Seattle, Sioux Falls, Stockholm, Tehran, Toronto, Vancouver, Vienna, Warsaw and Washington DC.
In London, on 19 July at 6.30pm there will be a public meeting at House of Commons, in Committee Room 12, with guest speakers: Chris Bryant MP, Jean Lambert MEP, an Iranian gay activist, Simon Forbes and Peter Tatchell. Open to the public. All welcome.
Iranian sources confirm trumped up charges
Afdhere Jama, editor of the queer Muslim magazine Huriyah (http://www.huriyahmag.com), supports the view that Mahmoud Asgari and Ayaz Marhoni were gay and that they were hanged because of their homosexuality. He bases his belief on evidence he received from three people in the city of Mashhad, where they were hanged, including information from a person who knows the family of Ayaz Marhoni.
Afdhere Jama states:
“According to my sources, the boys were arrested about a year and couple of months before the execution. On the day of their arrest, five boys were fondling each other in a semi-public area. Their ages were 13, 14, 15, 15 (Mahmoud), and 17 (Ayaz). These are all boys that knew each other, and had homosexual relations with each other (perhaps for years).
“A woman called her civilian police husband who then tried to arrest them all (with the help of civilians), but only Ayaz, Mahmoud and a 13 year old boy were caught.
“Because the age of consent for men in Iran is 15, the 13 year old boy is automatically then classified raped by then15 year old Mahmoud and 17 year old Ayaz. So, in the eyes of the Iranian law, that boy was raped. Whether the other boys were a few years older or not is not even a question, not to mention whether he (the 13 year old) was a willing participant. Because the issue is homosexuality, it even carries a harsher sentence.
“It should be noted that none of the claims about ‘knife’ and ‘drunk’ are true, but trumped up claims to support how these ‘heterosexual’ boys raped a ‘heterosexual’ teen. The father of the 13 year old boy claimed his son was raped because in the conservative society of Iran it is much better to have a heterosexual raped son than a homosexual willing participant. Everyone and anyone from the east can identify with this.
“In reality, however, these boys faced many charges, including resisting arrest (for running away), disrupting public peace (because apparently the whole neighbourhood was in chaos because everyone wanted to hurt the boys who were committing homosexuality), public indecency (for having homosexual sex in public), and ultimately for homosexual/sodomy rape of men (which carries much tougher penalty than a heterosexual rape, for the 13 year old), etc.
“It should also be noted that the Quds daily (newspaper) Human Rights Watch relied on is a government-controlled news agency, who have in the past and the present contribute news only acceptable to the government. As far as I know, there are really no independent Iranian news agencies which dealt with this story – because they could not honestly deal with it and get away with it,” said Mr Jama.
New revelations about the execution of Mahmoud Asgari and Ayaz Marhoni in the Iranian city of Mashhad on 19 July 2005, based on research by Simon Forbes of OutRage! and contacts inside Iran :
“A year-long investigation into this case has revealed that the regime’s allegations against the two hanged youths, Mahmoud Asgari and Ayaz Marhoni, are riddled with contradictions, implausibilities and outright lies,” according to Peter Tatchell of OutRage!.
“At first it was claimed by Iranian officials that they were aged 18 and 19, then that they were 19 and 21, then aged 18 and 20, and finally they made the claim that they were both above 18 at the time of their alleged crimes.
“However, the best evidence is that both youths were aged 17 when they were executed and therefore minors, aged 15 or 16, at the time of their alleged crimes. This execution of minors is in flagrant breach of international agreements the Tehran regime has signed.
“The method of hanging was specifically designed to cause a slow, painful death by strangulation.
“Concerning their crimes: at first it was claimed that they committed one rape and were child molesters, then that they had committed several rapes. By the autumn of 2005, the supporters of the regime were spreading rumours that they were serial child killers.
“Local sources in Mashhad state that Mahmoud and Ayaz were lovers, not rapists or child abusers – contrary to the homophobic propaganda of the Iranian regime and its western left-wing and Islamist apologists.
“Witnesses report seeing them together and obviously in love at a private party in 2003.
“Mahmoud and Ayaz were charged with the capital crime of homosexuality after a disapproving family member reported their relationship to the police.
“At least one, and possibly both, of the hanged boys were members of Iran’s persecuted Arab minority. Racism appears to have played a part in the stereotypical way they were portrayed by the regime as being ‘underclass’ thieves and hooligans.
“Informants inside Iran make it clear that the boys were of good character and that they came from decent, law-abiding families whose fathers had good jobs.
“The execution of Mahmoud and Ayaz conforms to a pattern of state torture and murder of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) people by the Iranian clerical regime.
“In publicised executions of gay people, the men are often accused of the kidnap and rape of a younger male. All such allegations need to be treated with extreme scepticism, as they tend to follow a suspiciously stereotypical formula.
“By instituting charges of kidnap and rape, the Iranian authorities apparently hope to discredit the victims, discourage public protests and deflect international condemnation. They calculate that there will be little Iranian or international sympathy for people hanged for crimes like abduction and sexual assault,” said Mr Tatchell.