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Sakineh Mohammadi Ashtiani, Woman Who Faced Stoning Death, 'Confesses' On Iranian State TV

ALI AKBAR DAREINI   08/12/10 03:20 PM ET   AP

Sakineh Mohammadie Ashtiani

TEHRAN, Iran — A lawyer for an Iranian woman who had faced death by stoning on an adultery conviction said Thursday he suspects she was tortured into confessing that she was an unwitting accomplice to her husband's murder.

Iranian state television broadcast the purported confession of Sakineh Mohammadi Ashtiani, 43, on Wednesday night in an apparent attempt to deflect criticism of her case by the U.S., other countries and rights groups. Instead of the adultery charge, it focused on allegations she was involved in murder – something the U.S. and other countries also punish by death.

Human Rights Watch has said Ashtiani, a mother of two, was first convicted in May 2006 of having an "illicit relationship" with two men after the death of her husband and was sentenced by a court to 99 lashes. Later that year, she was also convicted of adultery and sentenced to be stoned to death, even though she retracted a confession that she claims was made under duress.

Iran last month lifted the stoning sentence for the time being after international outrage over the brutality of the punishment. Iran says Ashtiani has also been convicted of involvement in the murder of her husband. She could still be executed by hanging.

The outcry over the case is the latest source of friction between Iran and the international community, with the United States, Britain and human rights groups urging Tehran to stay the execution. U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton called on Iran this week to release all political prisoners and expressed alarm about several specific detainees, including Ashtiani. Brazil, which has friendly relations with Iran, offered her asylum.

In the broadcast, the woman identified as Ashtiani said she unwittingly played a role in her husband's murder. Her face was blurred and a woman who was not seen translated her words into Farsi from Azeri Turkish, which is spoken in parts of Iran.

"I established telephone contacts with a man in 2005," she said. "He deceived me by his language. ... He told me, 'Let's kill your husband.' I could not believe at all that my husband would be killed. I thought he was joking. ... Later I learned that killing was his profession." She said the man, whom she did not identify, brought electrical devices, wire and gloves to her house and electrocuted her husband while she watched.

Malek Ajdar Sharifi, a senior judiciary official, was quoted by state TV as part of the same report as alleging that Ashtiani had given her husband an injection that left him unconscious, then the man attached electrical devices to his neck and killed him.

Sharifi also said Ashtiani sent her children out of the house to clear the way for her husband's murder.

Ashtiani's lawyer, Javid Houtan Kian, denied she has ever been charged with murder or brought to trial over her husband's killing in 2005.

"She was tortured to make those confessions," he told The Associated Press in a telephone interview. He came to that conclusion, he said, because she has never before admitted to any role in the murder.

"There is no charge of murder in her file," he said. "She would have been hanged years ago if she had any role in the murder of her husband," he added. "She had absolutely no role in the murder."

The lawyer said the man's killer spent three years in prison and is now free after a pardon from Ashtiani's children.

Rights groups criticized the broadcast of her statement, calling it one of many forced confessions in Iran's justice system.

Rights groups say Iran uses forced confessions in trials against political prisoners, including in the mass trial of more than 100 activists and former government officials accused of taking part in last year's postelection unrest.

"This so-called confession forms part of growing catalog of other forced confessions and self-incriminating statements made by many detainees in the past year," said Hassiba Hadj Sahraoui, Amnesty International's deputy director for the Middle East and North Africa.

Kian said he was not allowed to meet with his client since the broadcast confession.

"I was told that my client is barred from receiving people," he said.

In the broadcast, the woman also criticized her previous lawyer, Mohammad Mostafaei, for publicizing her case.

"Why did he televise the case? Why did he discredit me before my family members and relatives who didn't know I'm in jail?" she said. "Now, I have a complaint against him."

Mostafaei maintained a blog that sparked a worldwide campaign to free his client. In July, Iranian authorities said they would not carry out the stoning sentence for the time being. The lawyer fled to Norway, where he has applied for asylum.

Stoning was widely imposed in the years after the 1979 Islamic revolution, and even though Iran's judiciary still regularly hands down such sentences, they are often converted to other punishments.

The last known stoning was carried out in 2007, although the government rarely confirms that such punishments have been meted out.

Under Islamic rulings, a man is usually buried up to his waist, while a woman is buried up to her chest with her hands also buried. Those carrying out the verdict then throw stones until the condemned dies.

Ashtiani's stoning was approved by the country's Supreme Court, but the law could allow the judiciary head to order another trial or appeal for a pardon from Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who has final say on all state matters.

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TEHRAN, Iran — A lawyer for an Iranian woman who had faced death by stoning on an adultery conviction said Thursday he suspects she was tortured into confessing that she was an unwitting accompl...
TEHRAN, Iran — A lawyer for an Iranian woman who had faced death by stoning on an adultery conviction said Thursday he suspects she was tortured into confessing that she was an unwitting accompl...
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01:27 PM on 09/04/2010
God is not strict adherence to all laws but using wisdom and mercy to judge rightly. Love God and love your neighbor embodies all the law and commandmants.

Many of these Iranian clerics seem to lack love and mercy and follow the law with a fanatical form of intesity and absoluteness which discards love and mercy.

Fanatical and absolute adherence to laws and religious texts is not Godly but attempts to define human beings as robots and machines who simply need to be programmed or beaten into following the words in a religious text. This harsh enforcent and interpretation of law is then defined as "Godliness" but simply creates hatred towards God.

Is God a lawyer hunched over religious text?......or is God a being who loves HUMAN beings even with all our flaws and imperfections. These clerics don't seem to want to wait for their God's judgement but want to begin creating hell and judgement right here on earth for women and others who won't "submit" to their cruel and punishing God of force and threats.

They will be judged as they so judge.
10:46 AM on 08/16/2010
I am not opposed to the death penalty. It is immoral for society to spend precious resources keeping sociopaths comfortable with rec rooms, cable TV, and free medicine, while innocent people can't afford education and medical care.

Once all essentials have been provided for for innocent people - especially children - then we can consider throwing good money after bad and spending billions on people who have decided not to live within civil norms.

In any case, prisons should be cost neutral. They need to literally repay their debt to society - not create more debt. Make them work. Hard.

That being said, burying a woman up to her neck and then smashing her skull with stones because she allegedly had sex with a man is a wee bit over the top.
01:16 AM on 08/16/2010
from what I understand if your beaten with 99 lashes you would confess and what rights does this woman have.....none hersay he said ...so bad ..those poor women in those countries..This is 2010 not the dark ages.
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07:57 PM on 08/15/2010
When we mess with the governments of other nations there always seems to be repercussions that produce something worse than what we tried to fix.
07:59 PM on 08/14/2010
They probably threatened to kill her children. Im sure this is why she "confessed". This woman had the unfortunate luck to be born in a country that treats women worse then a rabid dog. I hope she gets her vengance on way or the other.
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rgilley
07:47 AM on 08/14/2010
How long will the world allow this 13th century remnant of a country to continue ?
10:57 PM on 08/13/2010
Stone her - stone her goooood. No making woopeee.

Use small stones. Bury her up to neck.

Iran gooooood country.
01:24 AM on 08/16/2010
unbelievable!!!!!!
10:21 AM on 08/16/2010
I hope you realize that I was using grotesque and macabre sarcasm in very bad taste...

I wasn't actually serious.

Stoning is barbarous.
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10:56 PM on 08/13/2010
I shudder to think that these "leaders" have earned the right to nuclear weapons....
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rgilley
07:48 AM on 08/14/2010
I can't imagine isreal ever allowing that to happen.
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Yank in France
Thomas Paine, expat in France 1792-1802
03:07 PM on 08/14/2010
The stoning of this woman is reprehensible and disgusting, but it takes a perverted and cruel mind to use this deplorable incident (or Iran's horrible human rights record) to justify the expulsion of Palestinians, the seizure of their homes without compensation and the repression of their most basic human rights to travel within the occupied territories!
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11:57 PM on 08/14/2010
They may not know it's coming.
10:27 PM on 08/13/2010
Leave her alone buttheads. The world sees through your sham. Karma may have to come your way.
05:08 PM on 08/13/2010
I don't believe it!! Why cover the entire face completely of the woman speaking?? if it truly were her then Iranian officials should show the front of her face (similar to the pic shown). Iran will do anything to try to hedge this humanitarian effort.
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Big Game Hunter
04:36 PM on 08/13/2010
until the ayatolla and all the basijis are hanging from lamp-posts, the people of Iran will never be free. It will not be by peaceful protest, but a violent revolution followed by a long purge.
03:46 PM on 08/13/2010
I fail to see how this sort of justice serves anyone. But the timing is such that it will further incite hatred of all things muslim. One would think the men would wise up. But they never seem to. They seem to feed the media cycles.

Not that how the western world treats it's women is any better. The whole system has failed. Perhaps if we put women in charge the world would be a better place.
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Yank in France
Thomas Paine, expat in France 1792-1802
03:11 PM on 08/14/2010
I oppose the US's anti-Muslim bias, but the truth is that the West treats women a whole lot better. Women have enormous rights in Western countries, including the US, whereas women in North Africa or most other Muslim countries are treated as something close to slaves.

The main exception to this rule is in Western countries where Muslim women benefit from the same rights as their non-Muslim sisters.
03:58 PM on 08/14/2010
Throwing all perspective out of the window isn't very helpful.
wyldthings
as a young man I said I'd never get old an didn'
03:41 PM on 08/13/2010
I truly do not understand this site. Last week Time Magazine showed the picture of an Afghanistan women with her face disfigured. The outrage against showing this picture was huge. They are promoting the war and who cares about her this is propaganda. Now you have great sympathy for this women. I truly don't understand the difference.
07:33 PM on 08/13/2010
Huh? The point of the upset over the Time photo, is that people claimed her miserable condition was being exploited to justify more war.

No one is saying we should go to war with Iran, b/c they stone women to death. They are jsut saying, that this woman should not be murdered.
02:21 PM on 08/13/2010
It's so disgusting hearing the treatment women get in Iran. Just disgusting. Such a shame that men there from what I've seen on tv treat the women with such disregard. Makes me sick.
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SilentSolidarity
So what do you need? Besides a miracle.
03:11 PM on 08/13/2010
It's because of the rise of the Hardliners. They want it that way. 50% of the Iranian population is under 30 and they want change.
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Big Game Hunter
04:38 PM on 08/13/2010
And they'll only get it if they're willing to kill. The basijis are and do it all the time with the Ayatolla's blessing - until they're all gone, the people of iran will never be free.
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Yank in France
Thomas Paine, expat in France 1792-1802
03:16 PM on 08/14/2010
It is indeed terrible the way the Iranian regime treats women, but they are treated even worse in Saudi Arabia or many of the hinterlands of Pakistan and other countries.

As other posters have pointed out, many Iranians want regime change, but it is up to them to do it, not America or anyone else.

I hope readers of this story understand that no one wants America to solve this sort of problem. It is not our role and, when our govt does act, it almost always uses these terrible human rights violations to justify policies backed on ulterior motives!
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01:58 PM on 08/13/2010
Barbarians.
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FairuzGhowar
08:57 AM on 08/16/2010
I cannot take you seriously when you're all up and arms and horrified that Sakina from Iran's being stoned to death but don't care about the 100,000s of kids maimed, wounded, or killed by us in Iraq and Afghanistan or the 1400 incinerated during cast lead who died for voting wrong while you turned a blind eye. Go away.