One hanged youth was a minor, latest outrage by Islamo-fascist regime.
London – 27 July 2005
Two teenagers – one 16 and the other 18 – were publicly executed in Iran on 19 July 2005 for the ‘crime’ of homosexuality.
Email, phone, fax and write your protests to the Iranian Ambassador:
Tel: 020 7225 3000
Fax: 020 7589 4440
Iranian Ambassador
Embassy of Iran
16 Prince’s Gate
London SW7 1PT
Protest 1-2pm Thursday 11 August 2005 – Iranian Embassy, 16 Prince’s Gate, London SW7 (near Royal Albert Hall).
Mahmoud Asgari (16) and Ayaz Marhoni (18) were hanged in Edalat (Justice) Square in the city of Mashhad, in north east Iran.
OutRage!’s sources for this story include clandestine gay and lesbian activists inside Iran, members of the democratic and left Iranian opposition, and the websites of pro-government news agencies in Iran.
The Islamic fundamentalist regime in Iran enforces Sharia law, which dictates the death penalty for gay sex: variously including hanging, stoning, beheading or dropping from a high place.
Shocking photos of the execution are on the link below (click on the small images to bring up a high resolution versions).
The teenagers admitted to having gay sex, probably under torture, but claimed in their defence that many young boys had sex with each other and that they were not aware that homosexuality was punishable by death.
Prior to their execution, the teenagers were held in prison for 14 months and severely beaten with 228 lashes.
Their length of detention suggests that they committed the so-called offences more than a year earlier, when Mahmoud was 15 and Ayaz was 17.
Ruhollah Rezazadeh, the lawyer of the youngest boy (16), had appealed that Mahmoud was too young to be executed and that the court should take into account his tender age. He was quoted by the IRIN news agency as saying that “the judiciary had trampled on its own laws”, explaining that the Iranian courts usually commute death sentences on children to five year jail.
Despite his pleas, the Supreme Court in Tehran ordered Mahmoud to be hanged.
Under the Iranian penal code, girls as young as nine and boys as young as 15 can be hanged.
Three other young gay Iranians are being hunted by the police in connection with the same so-called crime. They have gone into hiding and cannot be found. If caught, they will probably also face execution.
“News of the two executions was reported by ISNA (Iranian Students News Agency) on 19 July. It stated that they were hung for the crime of sodomy,” said Peter Tatchell of the London-based lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender human rights group, OutRage!, which helped break the story to the international media.
“A later news story by Iran Focus, which claimed to be based on this original ISNA report, said the youths were executed for raping a 13 year old boy. But the ISNA report does not mention any rape or any 13 year old boy.
“A report of the executions on the website of the banned, underground democratic opposition movement, The National Council of Resistance Of Iran, also makes no reference to rape.
“The NCRI has played a heroic role in resisting the clerical fascist regime in Iran and campaigning for democracy and human rights. It has been smeared as a “terrorist organization” by the US State Department. The NCRI is no more a terrorist organisation that the anti-Nazi resistance in occupied Europe during World War Two.
“The allegation of rape may be a trumped up charge to undermine public sympathy for the youths. The Iranian regime often resorts to smears and false allegations to discredit people it has executed and to undermine human rights campaigns.
“It could be that the 13 year old was a willing participant but that Iranian law (like the laws of many western nations) deems that no person aged 13 is capable of sexual consent and that therefore even consensual sexual contact is automatically deemed in law to be statutory rape.
“The use of torture is routine in Iran. These two boys were violently abused in prison, receiving more than 200 lashes.
“These teenagers are said to have confessed to gay sex. It would be very unusual for anyone to make such a confession voluntarily, given the violently homophobic nature of Iranian society, and the public stigma and shame of admitting to same-sex acts.
“People who admit to gay sex in Iran risk disownment by their family, possible ‘honour killing’ by neighbours, and jailing, whipping and execution by the state.
“The allegations of rape appear to have only surfaced after adverse publicity in the international media and condemnation by human rights groups in Iran and abroad.
“We are not saying the rape allegations are untrue. But that they seem very unlikely, given that these allegations appear to have suddenly and very conveniently surfaced once an outcry ensued.
“It is, of course, possible that the original ISNA report was incomplete and that it inadvertantly failed to mention the rape claims. But usually the Iranian authorities openly boast about rapists being hung as a deterrent and to win public sympathy. So if the teenagers were guilty of rape, why was it not mentioned in the original news report?
“Even if the youths were guilty of rape, the public execution is unjustified and extreme,” said, Mr Tatchell.
Original news story in Farsi from ISNA, with three photographs:
http://isna.ir/Main/NewsView.aspx?ID=News-556874
“This is just the latest barbarity by the Islamo-fascists in Iran,” added Peter Tatchell.
“The entire country is a gigantic prison, with Islamic rule sustained by detention without trial, torture and state-sanctioned murder.
“According to Iranian human rights campaigners, over 4,000 lesbians and gay men have been executed since the Ayatollahs seized power in 1979.
“Altogether, an estimated 100,000 Iranians have been put to death over the last 26 years of clerical rule. The victims include women who have sex outside of marriage and political opponents of the Islamist government.
“Last August, a 16 year old girl, Atefeh Rajabi, was hung for ‘acts incompatible with chasity.’
“Britain’s Labour government is pursuing friendly relations with this murderous regime, including aid and trade. We urge the international community to treat Iran as a pariah state, break off diplomatic relations, impose trade sanctions and give practical support to the democratic and left opposition inside Iran,” said Mr Tatchell.
Urgent action:
Protest to the Iranian Ambassador:
Tel: 020 7225 3000
Fax: 020 7589 4440
Iranian Ambassador
Embassy of Iran
16 Prince’s Gate
London SW7 1PT
“If you live outside the UK, protest to the Iranian Embassy in your country, and press your government to break off diplomatic relations and impose trade sanctions against Iran – not only on account of these two executions, but also because of the many persistent and widespread human rights violations sanctioned by the Iranian clerical tyranny against women, trade unionists and minority nationalities,” urged Mr Tatchell.
Email this news release and photos to your friends. Urge them to protest too.