Reyhaneh Jabbari's Execution postponed, Pour Shajari
re-arrested,Sadeghi missing in custody, Boroujerdi to be hanged
by Shadi Paveh
October 3, 2014 at 6:15 am
October 3, 2014 at 6:15 am
Prison authorities ordered the crowd to leave and
assured Jabbari's family that she was not to be hanged -- a statement the
authorities commonly make before an execution so it can be carried out quietly,
without incident.
Meanwhile, Ayatollah Boroujerdi has been taken
from his prison cell in Evin to be executed and is being held incommunicado at
an undisclosed location. Also "missing" is dissident blogger Mohammad
Reza Pour Shajari and prominent student activist Arash Sadeghi, both presumed
to have been re-arrested according to friends and family.
The "mainstream media" and so-called
Human Rights Groups have, as usual, remained silent. The regime tells the media
that information about "missing" prisoners is inaccurate in order to
prevent publication of the news.
The Iranian killing machine seems to be counting
on the reluctance of the U.S. to intervene in any serious way, in order to run
its nuclear weapons program to completion.
Iran continues to hide behind the world's focus
on ISIS to accelerate political arrests, executions, "prison
cleansing" and above all, its program to achieve nuclear capability.
Iran seems to be counting on the reluctance of
the United States to intervene in any serious way, in order to run its nuclear
weapons program to completion.
Most recently, according to the International
Committee Against Execution, Reyhaneh
Jabbari, who was transferred to Rajai Shahr Prison to be hanged on Monday
September 29, has been returned to her cell in Shahr-Ray Prison. Her execution
was halted only to be re-scheduled for Oct 8, 2014.
On September 29, Jabbari was seized by prison
guards during her shower, forced to dress and told that she would be hanged in
the morning. After the prison staff allowed her to make one last phone call to
her mother, she was transferred to Rajai-Shahr prison and placed in solitary
confinement to await execution at dawn.
Upon her daughter's transfer, Jabbari's mother,
Shole Pakravan, rushed to Rajai-Shahr prison with her husband, two daughters
and a few friends. In front of the prison a crowd grew quickly to protest
Jabbari's execution. Prison authorities ordered the crowd to leave and assured
Jabbari's family that she was not to be hanged -- a statement the authorities
commonly make before an execution so it can be carried out quietly, without
incident. Shole Pakravan refused to leave the premises until her daughter was
transferred unharmed back to her original cell in Shahr-Ray Prison.
Meanwhile, the news spread through social media
quickly, among a number of Italian, American and Swedish online news agencies.
Additionally, the European Union, United Nations, along with most human rights
organizations were alerted to the imminent execution. As a result, her
execution was halted -- but re-scheduled for Oct 8, 2014. Perhaps the Iranian
regime is hoping her case will be overlooked by then amidst headlines dominated
by ISIS.
Jabbari was sentenced to death when she was 19
years old for stabbing a man who tried to rape her. Human rights activists have
been demanding the reversal of her death sentence and subsequent release from
prison, as she acted in self-defense. Islamic law, however, rarely recognizes
self-defense, especially in cases of rape. Many women have already been
executed for defending themselves; many more await execution.
Meanwhile, Ayatollah
Hossein Kazamani Boroujerdi has been taken from his cell in Evin Prison to
be executed, and has since been "missing." The Iranian regime does
not allow the media inside Iran to report on missing prisoners; deeming the
information inaccurate and propaganda against the regime.
Also "missing" is Mohammad Reza
Pour Shajari; who was re-arrested a few days, ago according to his
daughter. The regime is denying the arrest and any knowledge of Mr. Pour
Shajari's disappearance.
Arash Sadeghi, a prominent political student
activist, was arrested a few hours after posting comments on his Facebook page
criticizing the regime, according to a source close to Sadeghi who was interviewed
by Gatestone Institute and wishes to remain anonymous:
"Yes, they come for him and the rest of us
who had been involved in the uprising of 2009. They are arresting everyone...
mass arrests inside Iran of anyone who opposes them now or has opposed them in
the past. They are counting on ISIS to distract the world from this systematic
cleansing... luckily I was not home and was not arrested. We have no idea where
Arash is, I just know that they arrested him hours after his Facebook
comments... I also fear they are torturing him all over again... he is very
frail, only 60 kilos now after what they did to him in prison last time. "
There has been no news of Sadeghi since his
arrest on September 6, 2014. Iran is evidently escalating the cleansing of its
prisoners -- political and non-political alike; many prisoners have apparently
been taken to Rajai Shahr prison to await execution.
Meanwhile, the "mainstream media" and
so-called Human Rights groups have, as usual, been silen
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