• We’re currently investigating an issue related to the forum theme and styling that is impacting page layout and visual formatting. The problem has been identified, and we are actively working on a resolution. There is no impact to user data or functionality, this is strictly a front-end display issue. We’ll post an update once the fix has been deployed. Thanks for your patience while we get this sorted.

Girl, 16, hanged in public in Iran

Link 1

Iran Focus

On Sunday, August 15, a 16-year-old girl in the town of Neka, northern Iran, was executed. Ateqeh Sahaleh was hanged in public on Simetry Street off Rah Ahan Street at the city center.

The sentence was issued by the head of Neka?s Justice Department and subsequently upheld by the mullahs? Supreme Court and carried out with the approval of Judiciary Chief Mahmoud Shahroudi.

In her summary trial, the teenage victim did not have any lawyer and efforts by her family to recruit a lawyer was to no avail. Ateqeh personally defended herself. She told the religious judge, beloved patriot Rezaii, that he should punish the main perpetrators of moral corruption not the victims.

The judge personally pursued Ateqeh?s death sentence, beyond all normal procedures and finally gained the approval of the Supreme Court. After her execution Rezai said her punishment was not execution but he had her executed for her ?sharp tongue?.

Violence, poverty and abuse led girl, 16, to gallows

The orphaned 16-year-old girl hanged in front of residents in this town close to the Caspian Sea on August 15 suffered years of brutal violence, exploitation and torture in the hands of relatives, local officials and plain strangers, and in a country where girls are the most vulnerable members of society, she had no one to go to for help.

The tragic picture emerges from dozens of interviews conducted by an Iran Focus correspondent with Atefeh Rajabi?s classmates, friends, relatives and neighbors in this humid, overcrowded industrial town that sits on a busy highway linking Tehran with the north of the country.

The hanging of Atefeh Rajabi has shocked the residents of Neka, who still differ widely in their assessment of the girl, but none voices support for the punishment that she has received. An air of tension and eerie silence hangs over the town?s smoke-filled tea-houses, or chaikhanehs, where men spend hours chatting quietly in clusters of three or four over tea. In a summer month like August, business should be booming in this town as thousands of Tehran residents flock to the sandy beaches of the Caspian. But right now, the visitors are for the most part not holidaymakers.

?There are lots of strangers who come and we are used to them,? says Askar, a young shopkeeper who sells a variety of citrus fruit jams. ?But right now, all of them are asking about the girl. They want to know who she was and how she died.?

The shock of Atefeh?s execution has gone far beyond this town. Even in a country that has the highest number of executions in the world and routinely executes minors, Iranians across the nation have been bewildered by accounts of the hanging of a 16-year-old girl. The fact that the religious judge himself put the rope around her neck and the letters of ?congratulations? from the town?s governor to the judge, commending him for his ?firm approach? have only added to the torment and pain many say they have felt.

?Atefeh was not a well-behaved girl, that?s for sure. But do you hang a girl for having sex with an unmarried man?? asked Fariba, a girl in Atefeh?s neighborhood, who like many others did not want to be identified.

According to judicial records, by the time Atefeh was 16, she had been convicted five times of having sex with unmarried men. Each time she spent some time in jail and was given 100 lashes (Under Iran?s law, punishment for having sex with a married man would have been far heavier.)

Atefeh?s father is an unemployed drug addict whose whereabouts are not known. Her mother died when Atefeh was still a child and she was left in the care of her octogenarian grandparents, which meant no care at all.

?She was abused by a close relative,? says Mina, one of the few girls in Neka who identify themselves as Atefeh?s friends. ?But she never dared even to talk about it to anyone. Tell your teachers? They?ll call you a whore. Tell the police? They lock you up and rape you. Better keep your mouth shut.?

Mina sobs as she recalls her friend?s tormented life, but many of these horrendous experiences are everyday facts of life for girls being brought up under a rigid theocratic regime that has institutionalized misogyny in its laws and practices.

?She sometimes talked about what these ?Islamic moral policemen? did to her while she was in jail. She still had nightmares about that. She said Behshahr Prison was the Hell itself.?

Alijan, a local grocer with graying hair, said many parents did not want Atefeh to socialize with their kids, because they thought she would have a corrupting influence on other young girls.

?Who can blame them?? he said, with a deep sigh. ?In this country, if you?re a man and you go to jail, you can forget about having a future. Now imagine if a girl goes to jail. She was hopeless.?

?I knew this girl very well and she did not deserve what they did to her,? explains a middle-aged woman who once taught Atefeh in the local girls? school. ?She was lively, intelligent, and, of course, rebellious. She wouldn?t take injustice from anyone. But the authorities here equate these qualities in a girl to prostitution and evil. They wanted to give all the girls and women a lesson.?

Hamid was one of those fathers in the neighborhood who did not want her two daughters to befriend Atefeh, but with hindsight, he feels the guilt of not having done anything to help the girl.

?I think the most devastating event in her life was the death of her mother,? Hamid said. ?Before that, she was a normal girl. Her mother was everything to her. When she died, she had no one to look after her.?

A pharmacist, whose shop is not far away from the Railway Square, where Atefeh was hanged, recalls her final, painful hour. ?When agents of the State Security Forces brought her to the gallows, I felt cold sweat running down my back. She looked so young and innocent, standing there in the middle of all these bearded men in military fatigues. Judge Reza?i must have felt a personal grudge against her. He put the rope around her neck and left her dangling on the gallows for 45 minutes. I looked around and everyone in the crowd was sobbing and damning the mullahs for doing this to our young people.?

Atefeh had no access to a lawyer at any stage and her death sentence was upheld by a Supreme Court that is dominated by fundamentalist mullahs. beloved patriot Rezaii, the religious judge, was reportedly so incensed with Atefeh?s ?sharp tongue? during the trial that he travelled to Tehran to convince the mullahs of the Supreme Court to uphold the death sentence.

The tragically short life of Atefeh Rajabi its brutal end are a reminder of the plight of millions of girls in a country where, according to state-owned newspapers, 75 percent of the population live below the poverty line, 66 percent of women are victims of some form of domestic violence, and over 70 percent of women suffer from varying degrees of depression. Iran remains, in the words of UN Human Rights Rapporteur Maurice Copithorne, ?a prison for women.?


Amnesty Internation News Release
 
Its only a matter of time until some of the people on this board somehow manage to minimize this and profess that we are not to judge.

From what those articles describe, I feel saddened.
 
A very sad end to such a poor girl. I can identify with her because like her I don't have much of a family and lost my mother at a young age as well. However I could never fully comprehend what she must have gone through.

rose.gif
 
Originally posted by: Pliablemoose

?Atefeh was not a well-behaved girl, that?s for sure. But do you hang a girl for having sex with an unmarried man?? asked Fariba, a girl in Atefeh?s neighborhood, who like many others did not want to be identified.

According to judicial records, by the time Atefeh was 16, she had been convicted five times of having sex with unmarried men. Each time she spent some time in jail and was given 100 lashes (Under Iran?s law, punishment for having sex with a married man would have been far heavier.)

A pharmacist, whose shop is not far away from the Railway Square, where Atefeh was hanged, recalls her final, painful hour. ?When agents of the State Security Forces brought her to the gallows, I felt cold sweat running down my back. She looked so young and innocent, standing there in the middle of all these bearded men in military fatigues. Judge Reza?i must have felt a personal grudge against her. He put the rope around her neck and left her dangling on the gallows for 45 minutes.

Atefeh had no access to a lawyer at any stage and her death sentence was upheld by a Supreme Court that is dominated by fundamentalist mullahs. beloved patriot Rezaii, the religious judge, was reportedly so incensed with Atefeh?s ?sharp tongue? during the trial that he travelled to Tehran to convince the mullahs of the Supreme Court to uphold the death sentence.

Cool 😎 sounds like the "fundamentalist's" ruling the show here now.

I'm sure the Repugs would've loved to hang Monica but they were too busy using her to try and knock the President off the perch.
 
Just goes to show what happens when Religious Extremists run the government based on their moral values!
 
Originally posted by: K1052
What a lovely legal system. Very compassionate.



The Iranian Government refers to it as "Compassionate Fundamentalism".


Really whack stuff, mixing religious dogma with judicial power.


Thank Gawd that could never have already started in the U.S.

 
Originally posted by: sierrita
Originally posted by: K1052
What a lovely legal system. Very compassionate.



The Iranian Government refers to it as "Compassionate Fundamentalism".


Really whack stuff, mixing religious dogma with judicial power.


Thank Gawd that could never have already started in the U.S.



Yeah, we are living on the edge of the "slippery slope." :disgust:
 
Originally posted by: Red Dawn
Just goes to show what happens when Religious Extremists run the government based on their moral values!

Remind you of a nation that's already double dipping in this direction?

"Mission Accomplished"
 

Disgraceful. And for these public officials to give themselves a pat on the back for accomplishing this great service makes it more despicable. Perhaps we invaded the wrong country, IMHO, the Iranians would have welcomed us with open arms and would have refromed much sooner than the Iraqis
 
Originally posted by: Bumrush99

Disgraceful. And for these public officials to give themselves a pat on the back for accomplishing this great service makes it more despicable. Perhaps we invaded the wrong country, IMHO, the Iranians would have welcomed us with open arms and would have refromed much sooner than the Iraqis

How much Oil does Iran have???
 
disgraceful 🙁

here's hoping the girl is in a better place now.

rose.gif


i wish these "moral" judges and lawyers would get the harshest punishment for such acts.

please dont bring religion into this. the dastardly judge executed her for her "sharp tongue", not based on any religious laws or civil laws being broken.
 
Originally posted by: KK
But those muslims are supposed to be peaceful, I don't understand.

we have our own whackos. i hope this muderous judge gets the same treatment he meted out.

I dont understand how you can pass your judgment. The people in that country itself are against the actions of the said judge. What makes you morally superior then?
 
Scares the shat out of me we still have this going on in the world. It is even scarier their influence is growing.

 
Originally posted by: Sultan
disgraceful 🙁

here's hoping the girl is in a better place now.

rose.gif


i wish these "moral" judges and lawyers would get the harshest punishment for such acts.

please dont bring religion into this. the dastardly judge executed her for her "sharp tongue", not based on any religious laws or civil laws being broken.

Aren't you are the same guy that said he would voluntarily stone his own children as punishment for fornication.
 
Originally posted by: K1052
Originally posted by: Sultan
disgraceful 🙁

here's hoping the girl is in a better place now.

rose.gif


i wish these "moral" judges and lawyers would get the harshest punishment for such acts.

please dont bring religion into this. the dastardly judge executed her for her "sharp tongue", not based on any religious laws or civil laws being broken.

Aren't you are the same guy that said he would voluntarily stone his own children as punishment for fornication.

No. I am the guy who said the punishment for adultery in Islam is stoning to death.
 
Originally posted by: Sultan
Originally posted by: K1052
Originally posted by: Sultan
disgraceful 🙁

here's hoping the girl is in a better place now.

rose.gif


i wish these "moral" judges and lawyers would get the harshest punishment for such acts.

please dont bring religion into this. the dastardly judge executed her for her "sharp tongue", not based on any religious laws or civil laws being broken.

Aren't you are the same guy that said he would voluntarily stone his own children as punishment for fornication.

No. I am the guy who said the punishment for adultery in Islam is stoning to death.

Borrowed from RabidMongoose's sig:

Sultan: I calmly tried to explain to him that adultery/fornication is the second biggest sin in Islam (and not Murder as Aimster said) and the punishment for the above is stoning to death (or capital punishment if you like) / 100 whips. I also tried to explain to him that if my children were found guilty of either of the previous sins, I will have no problem carrying out the punishment.
 
Originally posted by: K1052

Borrowed from RabidMongoose's sig:

Sultan: I calmly tried to explain to him that adultery/fornication is the second biggest sin in Islam (and not Murder as Aimster said) and the punishment for the above is stoning to death (or capital punishment if you like) / 100 whips. I also tried to explain to him that if my children were found guilty of either of the previous sins, I will have no problem carrying out the punishment.

Thanks for point it out. I have bolded the words that you should concentrate on.

A Crime has its punishments.
 
Originally posted by: dmcowen674
Originally posted by: Pliablemoose

?Atefeh was not a well-behaved girl, that?s for sure. But do you hang a girl for having sex with an unmarried man?? asked Fariba, a girl in Atefeh?s neighborhood, who like many others did not want to be identified.

According to judicial records, by the time Atefeh was 16, she had been convicted five times of having sex with unmarried men. Each time she spent some time in jail and was given 100 lashes (Under Iran?s law, punishment for having sex with a married man would have been far heavier.)

A pharmacist, whose shop is not far away from the Railway Square, where Atefeh was hanged, recalls her final, painful hour. ?When agents of the State Security Forces brought her to the gallows, I felt cold sweat running down my back. She looked so young and innocent, standing there in the middle of all these bearded men in military fatigues. Judge Reza?i must have felt a personal grudge against her. He put the rope around her neck and left her dangling on the gallows for 45 minutes.

Atefeh had no access to a lawyer at any stage and her death sentence was upheld by a Supreme Court that is dominated by fundamentalist mullahs. beloved patriot Rezaii, the religious judge, was reportedly so incensed with Atefeh?s ?sharp tongue? during the trial that he travelled to Tehran to convince the mullahs of the Supreme Court to uphold the death sentence.

Cool 😎 sounds like the "fundamentalist's" ruling the show here now.

I'm sure the Repugs would've loved to hang Monica but they were too busy using her to try and knock the President off the perch.


WOW

If you honestly believe that I think you should seek profssional help. The hate for religion (christians specifically, maybe youre afraid to speak against muslims? ) you spew is unending. The diatribe against republicans would be humorous if it werent becoming so sad.

Somehow I get the feeling one day we'll be seeing you on the news for stalking some politician or maybe trying to asassinate a celebrity.

I think you've gone off the deep end dave.

🙁
 
Back
Top