Archive for August 2010

Controversial ‘Family Bill’ Returns To Iranian Parliament’s Agenda

Aug 26th, 2010

Iran’s parliament is preparing to discuss a bill this week that would allow men to marry additional wives without the consent of their first wife, and would tax dowries.

It is called the Family Protection Bill, but it is better known as the antifamily bill.



Baha’i Community ‘Stunned’ By ‘Harsh’ Sentences In Iran

Aug 20th, 2010

By Peter Kenny  The Baha’i International Community said the harsh prison sentences meted out against seven Iranian Baha’i leaders are an unjust punishment against innocent people and an entire religious community. The five men and two women imprisoned were arrested in May 2008 and later charged with “spying for foreigners,” as well as “spreading corruption [...]



Stop Abuse of Political Prisoners

Aug 9th, 2010

Iranian prison authorities should end the solitary confinement of 17 political prisoners and afford them all the protections to which they are entitled, including access to their families and lawyers,Human Rights Watch said.



The Right Side of Justice: It’s Time to End Stoning

Aug 3rd, 2010

Like Sakineh, I too am a mother and I was born in Iran. Zahra, the character I played in the movie “The Stoning of Soraya M,” endured the unendurable cruelty of watching her niece being stoned to death, a fate similar to the reality awaiting Sakineh and 35 other Iranian women in 2010. Article 104 of the Iranian Penal Code is very specific about how this barbaric act of punishment is to be administered. It says that each stone used should “not be large enough to kill the person by one or two strikes; nor should they be so small that they could not be defined as stones.” For the Iranian regime, justice means the deliberate, slow, painful and ritualized murder of its very own citizens.
Source:The Huffington Post



Post-Election Protester’s Death Sentence Upheld; Re-Trial Denied By Supreme Court

Aug 1st, 2010

sentence has been upheld in an appeals court in Tehran, according to his lawyer. Jafar Kazemi’s lawyer, Nasim Ghanavi told the International Campaign for Human Rights in Iran that her client’s sentence has been upheld and that Branch 31 of the Supreme Court has also turned down a re-trial request. Branch 36 of the Tehran Province Appeals Courts, presided by Judge Zargar, issued the ruling.