Abdorrahman Boroumand Center

for Human Rights in Iran

https://www.iranrights.org
Promoting tolerance and justice through knowledge and understanding
Flogging

Flogging, 3 Individuals, Golbahar, Fars News, June 20, 2018

Fars News Agency
June 20, 2018
Web article

Fars News Agency

June 20, 2018

Provinces/Razavi Khorasan

For the first time in Golbahar

Implementation of public flogging sentence in Golbahar 

The thieves of the Mehr housing complex and Bagh villas in Golmakan have been sentenced to public flogging and this is the first time this sentence has been implemented. 

According to Fars News Agency reporter in Golbahar, at noon today, the thieves of the Mehr housing complex and Bagh villas in Golmakan were publicly flogged and this was the first time this sentence was implemented. 

The Chief of the Golbahar Court said in an interview with a Fars News Agency reporter in Golbahar on the sidelines of this event: Today, for the first time in Golbahar and Golmakan, we flogged those who stole people's property, and this was well received by citizens who expressed satisfaction and consider it necessary for maintaining security to enforce the law against thieves. 

Seyed Javad Mahmoudi added: Three experienced thieves, two of whom were involved in thefts from Mehr housing units and from empty houses in Golbahar and had been previously arrested by police, were sentenced in court to 74 lashes, three years imprisonment, and to return the stolen property, and today the flogging sentence was carried out against them in public. 

He continued: One of these three thieves is from Afghanistan, he was stealing from the Bagh villas in Golmakan, and the flogging sentence against him was also carried out in Golmakan. 

The Chief of the Golbahar court, emphasizing the enforcement of the law against people who violate others' rights, said: These three thieves have had several cases of theft, illicit relations, and drug use, and after confirmation, the verdict was issued against them. 

ABF Note

 

Findings of guilt in the Islamic Republic of Iran's Judicial Proceedings

The Islamic Republic of Iran's criminal justice system regularly falls short of the standards for due process necessary for impartiality, fairness, and efficacy. Suspects are often held incommunicado and not told of the reason for their detainment. Defendants are frequently prohibited from examining the evidence used against them. Defendants are sometimes prohibited from having their lawyers present in court. Additionally, confessions, made under duress or torture, are commonly admitted as proof of guilt. Because Iran's courts regularly disregard principles essential to the proper administration of justice, findings of guilt may not be evaluated with certainty.

Corporal Punishment: the Legal context in the Islamic Republic of Iran

The Islamic Republic's criminal code recognizes corporal punishment for a wide range of offenses: consumption of alcohol, theft, adultery, "flouting" of public morals, and mixing of the sexes in public. Judges have the latitude to mete out corporal punishment for those sentenced to death. In such cases, the flogging is carried out before death to maximize the suffering of defendant. Aside from flogging, the Islamic Republic also employs amputations as a punishment for theft. In such cases, the defendant is taken to a hospital and put under anesthesia as his hand or foot is amputated. In some cases the left foot and right hand are cut off, making it difficult for the condemned to walk, even with the assistance of a cane or crutches.

The Islamic Republic's Systematic Violation of its International Obligations under International Law

The use of corporal punishment is contrary to international law and is addressed in several international agreements. Article 5 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, which Iran has ratified, states that, "No one shall be subjected to torture or to cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment." Identical language is also used in the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR), which Iran is also a party to. The strongest expression of international disapproval is contained in the Convention Against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment (CAT). This treaty defines torture as, "any act by which severe pain or suffering, whether physical or mental, is intentionally inflicted on a person for such purposes as ... punishing him for an act he or a third person has committed or is suspected of having committed." Although the Islamic Republic of Iran has yet to sign the CAT, the prohibition on torture is now considered jus cogens and, therefore, part of customary international law. Furthermore, even though the norm against corporal punishment is not yet a jus cogens, there is increasing evidence that it is illegal under international human rights law.[1] In Osbourne v. Jamaica, the Committee Against Torture (a body of experts responsible for monitoring compliance with the Convention) held that "corporal punishment constitutes cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment or punishment contrary to Article 7 of the Convention." The Islamic Republic of Iran's systematic violations of its obligations under international law have been addressed by the UN General Assembly multiple times, most recently in December 2007. In Resolution 62/168, the UN expressed deep concern with Iran's continued flouting of international human rights law, particularly, "confirmed instances of torture and cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment, including flogging and amputations."