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UN Resolution 1737

Iran sentences another activist to death PDF Print E-mail
Tuesday, 09 February 2010
The Associated Press

By NASSER KARIMI

ImageTEHRAN, Iran (AP) — An Iranian court has convicted another opposition activist on charges related to the country's post-election turmoil and sentenced him to death, the judiciary said Tuesday.

The sentencing brings to at least 10 the number of those facing the death penalty in a mass trial over the unrest following Iran's disputed June presidential elections.

The Web site of the country's judiciary said the activist was convicted of Moharebeh, or defiance of God, and handed the capital punishment. The report also said that eight more people were sentenced to unspecified prison terms.

The eight were arrested following deadly clashes in late December between opposition protesters and security forces, it said. The report did not identify those convicted or say when they were sentenced.

The Web site also said that an appeals court has upheld earlier convictions and sentences for 35 opposition activists. Those included a five-year sentence for Behzad Nabavi, a deputy parliament speaker in the 1990s and a close ally of opposition leader Mir Hossein Mousavi.

Nabavi also served as deputy prime minister in the early 1980s when he negotiated with U.S. officials the release of American hostages held in the 1979 takeover by militant students of the U.S. embassy in Tehran.

Iran has already put more than 100 people on a mass trial that began in August as part of the crackdown on those challenging the election in which President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad was declared the winner. Along with the 10 death sentences, more than 80 of those on trial have been handed prison terms ranging from six months to 15 years.

Last month, Iran executed two men who were part of the mass trial, although they were detained before the June election for alleged ties to a foreign-based armed opposition group.

Also Tuesday, authorities released from detention two prominent opposition figures — Ali Reza Beheshti and Mohammad Reza Tajik. The two had been detained for months on charges related to the election unrest.

There was no word on why they were released or whether the charges against them have been dropped.

At least eight people were killed and hundreds were detained in the Dec. 27 clashes, the last in a series of major street confrontations between the opposition and the government that erupted in the wake of the June balloting.

The opposition alleges Ahmadinejad won the vote through massive fraud and that Mousavi is the rightful winner.

Earlier Tuesday, an opposition Web site said authorities detained a nephew of Mousavi's wife. The Kaleme site said Mohammad Saleh Noqrehkar was arrested Monday after he was summoned to Tehran's Evin prison.

Noqrehkar is also Mousavi's legal adviser who until last month worked as a spokesman for Iran's prosecutor office.

The late December clashes were the worst unrest since the immediate aftermath of the June election. Among the eight killed was Mousavi's nephew, Ali Mousavi. He was gunned down but authorities later said police didn't use firearms and said the nephew was "assassinated" by unknown assailants.

Another person close to Mousavi, his brother-in-law Shapoor Kazemi, was released in January after spending five months in detention. Kazemi is an engineer who is not involved in politics.

The opposition believes the detentions are an attempt to pressure Mousavi and the opposition movement.

Iran is bracing for expected protest marches Thursday to coincide with events marking the anniversary of the 1979 Islamic Revolution.




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In Focus
Iran's nuclear standoff
  • AFP: US Defence Secretary Robert Gates flew into the Saudi capital on Wednesday for talks expected to focus on Iran's nuclear programme and Washington's push for tough sanctions against Tehran.

  • Reuters: The Conservatives, favourites to win an election due in weeks, said on Wednesday they would back a U.N. arms embargo on Iran and a ban on oil and gas investment if Tehran remains defiant over its nuclear plans.

  • AP: Iran on Tuesday urged China to resist pressure by the United States and its allies for new sanctions against Tehran over its nuclear program.

  • New York Times: In the Iranian desert, at a sprawling industrial site ringed by barbed wire and antiaircraft guns, a shift in the enrichment of uranium is producing global jitters because it could shorten Iran’s path to the acquisition of nuclear weapons.

  • AFP: Gabon will "work closely" with the United States and others to pressure Iran to comply with UN demands over its nuclear program, Gabonese President Ali Bongo said Monday.

  • Reuters: China's Foreign Minister said on Sunday new sanctions on Iran will not solve the standoff over its nuclear program, while chiding the United States after two months of tensions between the big powers.

  • Washington Post: The Obama administration is pushing to carve out an exemption for China and other permanent members of the U.N. Security Council from legislation pending in the Senate and the House that would tighten sanctions on companies doing business in Iran, administration and congressional sources said.

  • AFP: Western nations pitched new sanctions against Iran in the Security Council Thursday amid signs that several members are reluctant to back a fourth round of punitive measures to deter Tehran's nuclear ambitions.

  • AP: China said Thursday it will continue to push for a diplomatic resolution to the Iranian nuclear standoff, rebuffing efforts by Western powers to introduce a new set of sanctions against Iran.

  • Iran Focus: Tehran, Mar. 03 - Iran's hard-line President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad gloated on Wednesday that all serious threats against his government's nuclear program have been thwarted, state media reported.

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