UN Rights Chief Slams Iran over Execution of Young Offenders

W460

UN Human Rights Commissioner Michelle Bachelet on Wednesday slammed Iran for reportedly executing two juvenile offenders in four days and urged Tehran to call an immediate halt to such killings.

Shayan Saeedpour was 17 when he was alleged to have committed murder in 2015. He was reported to have been executed on Tuesday, the UN said.

Majid Esmailzadeh, reportedly executed on Saturday, was convicted of a murder allegedly committed when he was under 18.

"The executions of these two child offenders are absolutely prohibited under international human rights law," Bachelet said in a statement.

"The imposition of the death penalty for crimes committed by people below the age of 18 at the time of the offence is strictly prohibited."

The former Chilean president said that despite repeated interventions from her office, the sentencing and execution of child offenders was still going on in Iran.

"This is both regrettable and, given the clear illegality of these actions, reprehensible," she said.  

"I repeat my call on Iranian authorities to honour its international human rights obligations, immediately halt all executions of juvenile offenders and commute all such death sentences."

Bachelet also condemned the execution of a third juvenile offender, Danial Zeinolabedini, which was confirmed on April 2.

He had been transferred to a new jail following a riot in a prison on March 28 in protest at conditions and the failure of the authorities to temporarily release detainees amid the COVID-19 pandemic.

Saeedpour had escaped from prison during March 27 protests over the new coronavirus pandemic.

Iran is among the world's hardest-hit countries in the COVID-19 pandemic, with 5,297 reported deaths.

It has temporarily released some 100,000 prisoners, or around 40 percent of its entire prison population, in several stages since March to reduce crowding.

Bachelet said the executions of the young offenders who were allegedly involved in the coronavirus protests "raises grave concerns about the possibility of expedited executions of other death-row prisoners" involved in those protests. 

Amnesty International said Tuesday that the execution of Saeedpour was "vengeful and cruel".

"The use of the death penalty against Shayan -- a child with a long history of mental illness -- was strictly prohibited," said Diana Eltahawy, Amnesty's deputy regional director for the Middle East.

Amnesty claimed there were at least 90 juvenile offenders on death row in Iran.

Comments 3
Thumb chrisrushlau 22 April 2020, 21:00

You wouldn't think of Chile as a first guess if asked to name a neo-colonialist state-like entity. The saying about some place dying of pneumonia if, say, London catches a cold--Lebanon seems to suffer from a lot of pneumonia--applies to many aspects of international legal life. Witness the Special Tribunal for Lebanon: a proud attestation by Lebanon and the international community that Lebanon's leaders do not trust its population either to have voting power in proportion to their numbers (Shias, e.g.) or to constitute their own courts of law. I use "leaders" advisedly: the people put up with this poor excuse of a system. It's a general agreement to do nothing and blame others.

Thumb chrisrushlau 22 April 2020, 21:14

"Also, for the first time, a 40% gender quota was put in place for candidates of each political party in parliamentary elections.[4]" (Wiki)
While it is true that maintaining markets, including the marketplace of ideas, is the main task of government, the public must lead the way in relying on the free exchange of information. This new set-aside, imposed on political parties, seems a massive overreach. If the Pinochet years resulted from an aristocracy being the actual state in Chile, this boutique equal-rights act matches her statements about "strict prohibitions" in a world of Zionism and NATO: boutique legalism. A UN human rights leader is like an Israeli cabinet post, Minister of Compassion. Let the UN shed permanent SC membership, like Chile shed lifetime senators.

Thumb chrisrushlau 22 April 2020, 21:15

"Abolition of the unelected
Amendments to the Constitution, approved by a joint session of Congress on August 16, 2005, eliminated non-directly elected senators from March 11, 2006, the day 20 newly elected senators were sworn in, leaving the total number of senators at 38, all directly elected. Previously, according to the Constitution of 1980, "designated" or "institutional" senators were appointed to the chamber. Two former heads of state, Eduardo Frei Ruiz-Tagle and Augusto Pinochet, were installed as senators for life. Pinochet later resigned from this position and Frei lost his seat in the 2005 reform. However, Frei remained in the Senate by winning an elective seat."