Archive for the ‘Iran’ Category

Acid attacks on women protest in Iran – Video


Acid attacks on women protest in Iran
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/10/23/world/middleeast/thousands-in-iran-protest-acid-attacks-on-women.html?smprod=nytcore-iphone smid=nytcore-iphone-share.

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Acid attacks on women protest in Iran - Video

Sitavk_ Pewendyekani H.D.K. Iran. October, 23 2014 " " – Video


Sitavk_ Pewendyekani H.D.K. Iran. October, 23 2014 " "
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Sitavk_ Pewendyekani H.D.K. Iran. October, 23 2014 " " - Video

Iran executes woman who killed her alleged rapist

By Ray Sanchez, CNN

October 25, 2014 -- Updated 0902 GMT (1702 HKT)

Iranian Reyhaneh Jabbari stands trial in Teheran, Iran, on December 15, 2008. She was executed Saturday.

STORY HIGHLIGHTS

(CNN) -- An Iranian woman convicted of murder -- in a killing human rights groups called self-defense against her rapist -- was hanged to death Saturday, state news agency IRNA reported.

Reyhaneh Jabbari, 26, was sentenced to death for the 2007 killing of Morteza Abdolali Sarbandi, a former employee of Iran's Ministry of Intelligence and Security.

The United Nations has said she never received a fair trial.

Her execution was originally scheduled for September 30, but was postponed. Amnesty International said the delay may have been in response to the public outcry against the execution.

Jabbari was convicted of murder after "a flawed investigation and unfair trial," according to Amnesty International.

The U.N. has said Sarbandi hired Jabbari -- then a 19-year-old interior designer -- to work on his office. She stabbed him after he sexually assaulted her, the U.N. has said.

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Iran executes woman who killed her alleged rapist

Iran nukes: Solution, not deadline, key

The head of the Iranian negotiating team called the Vienna talks "serious" and "helpful."

STORY HIGHLIGHTS

Editor's note: Alex Vatanka is a senior fellow at the Middle East Institute in Washington D.C. The views expressed in this commentary are solely his.

(CNN) -- Another round of nuclear talks ended late Thursday in Vienna. Nothing good, bad or even surprising has publicly emerged from the two-day talks between Iran and the P5+1 countries.

Given the overall trajectory of the nuclear talks in recent months -- to external viewers a dreary process of back and forth, bluster and stalling despite a shared desire to continue talking -- two outcomes appear more or less certain.

Alex Vatanka

First, the much-anticipated November 24 deadline for a permanent deal will not be met.

Second, the talks will continue and the negotiating teams need to decide whether they need three months, six months -- or any other length of time -- to try to reach a final deal.

Given the high stakes, and the reality that there are no alternative means of moving forward other than continuing talks, all sides are apparently buckling down.

The head of the Iranian negotiating team called the Vienna talks "serious" and "helpful."

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Iran nukes: Solution, not deadline, key

Iran hangs woman despite international campaign

Iran has hanged a woman convicted of murdering a former intelligence officer she claimed had tried to sexually assault her, defying international appeals for a stay of execution.

Reyhaneh Jabbari, 26, who had been on death row for five years, was put to death at dawn, the official IRNA news agency quoted the Tehran prosecutor's office as saying.

A message posted on the homepage of a Facebook campaign set up to try to save her noted the "sad news" of her death, adding the words "Rest in Peace" alongside pictures of Jabbari as a young child.

Amnesty International said in a statement issued late yesterdaythat the young Iranian woman, an interior designer, was due to be executed for the 2007 stabbing of Morteza Abdolali Sarbandi.

Iranian actors and other prominent figures had appealed for a stay of execution, echoing similar calls in the West.

Iran's judiciary had given several deadlines for Mr Sarbandi's family to spare Jabbari under an Islamic sharia law provision that allows a death sentence for murder to be commuted to a prison sentence with the agreement of the victim's family.

But relatives of Mr Sarbandi, a 47-year-old surgeon who earlier worked for the intelligence ministry, refused to grant clemency, demanding, according to Iranian media, that Jabbari tell "the truth."

A UN human rights monitor said the killing came in self-defence after Mr Sarbandi tried to sexually abuse Jabbari, and that the condemned woman's trial in 2009 had been deeply flawed.

But a medical report, prepared for the judiciary and quoted by IRNA in itsdispatch today, said Mr Sarbandi was stabbed in the back and that the killing had been premeditated.

Efforts for a commuted jail sentence had intensified in recent weeks but Mr Sarbandi's family and Jabbari remained at loggerheads over the circumstances of the killing.

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Iran hangs woman despite international campaign