Sunday, January 2, 2011

Stoning of Iran woman could be quashed

Iranian Sakineh Mohammadi Ashtiani (L) speaks with media in a news briefing as she meets with her son, Sajjad, in Tabriz. AP photo.

Iranian Sakineh Mohammadi Ashtiani (L) speaks with media in a news briefing as she meets with her son, Sajjad, in Tabriz. AP photo.
The sentence of death by stoning handed down by an Iranian court against a mother of two could be quashed, a senior judiciary official said on Sunday, adding that some ambiguities remained in her case.
When asked by Fars news agency whether the stoning sentence against Sakineh Mohammadi Ashtiani who was found guilty of adultery by an Iranian court could be quashed, Malek Ajdar Sharifi, the head of East Azerbaijan judiciary, said that "anything is possible."
Sharifi's remark came a day after Mohammadi Ashtiani appeared before a group of journalists working for international news networks during what Iranian judiciary officials called an "out of prison" visit to her family.
The journalists were not allowed to ask her questions during the meeting which took place in the presence of judiciary officials at a guesthouse in Tabriz, the capital of East Azerbaijan. His statement also comes after Sajjad Ghaderzadeh, the son of Mohammadi Ashtiani, pleaded before foreign media that her execution by stoning be stayed.
Sharifi said that certain "ambiguities" still remained in the "evidence" gathered in Mohammadi Ashtiani's case, and this was causing the delay in taking a final decision over the verdict.
The cleric said it is easy to issue a verdict in a case where the murderer clearly confesses to his crime. "But in this case where the defendant (Mohammadi Ashtiani) denies or makes justifications and there are ambiguities in the evidence, the procedure gets prolonged," he said.
Mohammadi Ashtiani, whose stoning sentence has triggered an outcry in the West, was sentenced to death by two different courts in Tabriz in separate trials in 2006. Her sentence to hang for her involvement in the murder of her husband was commuted to a 10-year jail term by an appeals court in 2007.
But a second sentence to death by stoning on charges of adultery leveled over several relationships, notably with the man convicted of her husband's murder, was upheld by another appeals court the same year.
In her Saturday remarks to foreign media she said she wants to sue "the two German" journalists, her former lawyer Mohammad Mostafaie, anti-stoning campaigner Mina Ahadi and her husband's convicted murderer Issa Taheri. "I have told Sajjad (her son)... to sue the ones who have disgraced me and the country... I have a complaint against them," she said.
The two German journalists from Bild am Sonntag were arrested on Oct. 10 in Tabriz for interviewing Ashtiani's son and family lawyer who were also taken into custody. Her son has been free on bail since last month.
Iran says the two Germans entered the country on tourist visas and failed to obtain the necessary accreditation for journalists from the authorities before "posing as reporters" when they contacted her family.
"I have come in front of the cameras at my own will to talk to the world," said the woman during her brief appearance on Saturday where journalists were also shown a film clip of her having dinner and chatting with her son.
"I am willing to talk because many people exploited (the case) and said I have been tortured, which is a lie," she said, speaking in Persian with a thick accent of the Azeri tongue of the northwestern region from which she hails. "Leave my case alone. Why do you disgrace me?" she asked the reporters.

No comments:

Post a Comment