海角大神

Why Iran suspended woman's stoning sentence

Iran suspended the stoning sentence for a woman convicted of adultery amid mounting international pressure, including the European Parliament's 658-1 resolution against such punishment.

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Lefteris Pitarakis/AP
A protester dressed in a costume depicting a woman stoned to death in Iran, participates in a demonstration against the government of Iran in central London, Aug. 25.

Caving in to growing international criticism, Iran聽on Wednesday suspended a woman's death-by-stoning sentence.

European leaders and Western activists had sought to prevent the execution of Sakineh Mohammadi Ashtiani, convicted of adultery, in a mounting war of words with Iranian hard-liners 鈥 including one who called French first lady Carla Bruni-Sarkozy a 鈥減rostitute鈥 who deserved to be killed after she advocated on the woman's behalf.

鈥淭he verdict regarding the extramarital affairs has stopped and it鈥檚 being reviewed,鈥 Foreign Ministry spokesman Ramin Mehmanparast told Iran鈥檚 state-run PressTV. He said a separate murder charge was 鈥渂eing investigated for the final verdict to be issued.鈥

Subsequent PressTV newscasts quoted Mr. Memanparast denying reports that Ms. Ashtiani had received 99 lashes as 鈥渁bsolutely wrong鈥 and conjured up by the Western media 鈥渢o give it this emotional sense, to stir up people鈥檚 emotions.鈥

鈥淚t means that international pressure has begun to tell, and finally they have begun to realize the negative fallout from this is much, much greater than efforts to prove the authenticity of Islamic justice,鈥 says Anoushiravan Ehteshami, an Iran specialist at Durham University in England.

European Parliament resolution: 658-1 against stoning

The European Parliament passed a resolution 658-1 Wednesday saying that a stoning punishment 鈥渃an never be justified or accepted.鈥 On Tuesday, European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso said the sentence was 鈥渂arbaric beyond words,鈥 with 鈥渘o justification under any moral or religious code.鈥

French Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner said he was willing go to Tehran if it would prevent the stoning. Brazil 鈥 one of the nations closest to Iran, which brokered a nuclear deal with Iran and Turkey last May 鈥 has offered Ms. Ashtiani asylum. The Vatican has also weighed in on what it criticized as the 鈥渂rutal鈥 punishment.

As outrage has grown, so, too, has Iran鈥檚 official determination not to buckle, though some Iranian media have indicated the stoning sentence might be changed to hanging, or to a lesser sentence. One pillar of Iran鈥檚 1979 Islamic revolution was 鈥渋ndependence鈥 from the political and cultural influence of outside powers 鈥 especially the West.

鈥淭he most important lesson for them is that there are certain global norms now that you break at considerable expense to yourself,鈥 says Professor Ehteshami. 鈥淎nd for all the ups and downs we鈥檝e had over this case 鈥 and the government insistence that it would not allow any interference, that it would not yield to international pressure 鈥 well, we鈥檝e seen the exact opposite [and] that ultimately it has not been able to cocoon itself.鈥

South Korea adds to sanctions; Castro cautions Iran

Pressure has been growing on Iran on a number of levels. Besides the Ashtiani stoning case, Iran鈥檚 controversial nuclear program led to the imposition of a fourth round of UN Security Council sanctions last June. Washington and the EU have followed with yet tougher measures, which can punish Iran鈥檚 trading partners.

On Wednesday, South Korea announced that it, too, would put a 鈥渉eavy penalty鈥 on the Seoul branch of Bank Mellat, which is listed in UN sanctions documents as facilitating large transactions for Iran鈥檚 nuclear, missile, and defense programs. Another 102 Iranian entities in South Korea would also be affected, all transactions with Iran to be scrutinized, and new investment in Iran鈥檚 energy sector restricted.

Even Fidel Castro 鈥 a fellow revolutionary whose anti-American and anti-imperial views should make him an ally of Iran 鈥 recently cautioned President Ahmadinejad聽against rhetoric that could lead to war with the West, expressing regret over his own actions in the 1962 Cuban missile crisis that nearly led to nuclear war between the US and the Soviet Union.

Iran鈥檚 supreme religious leader, Ayatollah Sayyed Ali Khamenei, said on Tuesday that Iran would overcome the obstacles.

鈥淭he enemies of the nation seek to frustrate the people with economic pressures so the people blame the government for them and ties are cut between the government and the people,鈥 state media quoted Ayatollah Khamenei as saying, according to a translation by Agence France-Presse.

鈥淏ut the nation and officials will undoubtedly circumvent the sanctions and render them ineffective just as [they have] in the past three decades,鈥 Khamenei said in a speech.

Top newspaper editor raised the stakes with Bruni lashing

Foreign Ministry spokesman Mehmanparast blamed the US for raising the temperature over the stoning case. His comments echoed steady accusations from Tehran鈥檚 arch-conservative leaders that the US, Britain, and Israel were behind the violent protests last summer in the wake of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's reelection, which opposition leaders 鈥 and many Iranians 鈥 say was rigged.

鈥淚t looks like they are playing a political game,鈥 said Mehmanparast.

But it was the chief of the hard-line Kayhan newspaper, Hossein Shariatmadari 鈥 the most powerful newspaper editor in Iran, and a representative of Khamenei 鈥 who turned the stoning sentence into a European cause.

After Mrs. Bruni-Sarkozy signed a petition with other celebrities calling for Ashtiani鈥檚 release, saying, 鈥淓verything within me refuses to accept this [sentence],鈥 Kayhan called her an 鈥淚talian prostitute鈥 who 鈥渉as had illegitimate relationships with different people before and after marrying [French President Nicolas] Sarkozy.鈥

鈥淩eviewing Carla Bruni鈥檚 records clearly shows why this immoral woman has supported an Iranian woman who has committed adultery, contributed to the murdering of her husband, and has been sentenced to death, and in fact she herself [Bruni] deserves death,鈥 Kayhan continued, in a translation by AFP.

鈥淭hey make these wild, wild inflammatory statements from time to time, and that is consistent and not new, when they lash out against a certain individual who may have been more vocal in the West,鈥 says Ehteshami. 鈥淭he concept is obviously case-relevant here.鈥

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