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Thursday, May 31, 2007



Thursday, April 19, 2007

This is how religions get messed up.

Iran Exonerates Six Who Killed in Islam’s Name

 
Published: April 19, 2007

TEHRAN, April 18 — The Iranian Supreme Court has overturned the murder convictions of six members of a prestigious state militia who killed five people they considered “morally corrupt.”

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Morteza Nikoubazi/Reuters

At an Army Day parade Wednesday in Tehran, a soldier saluted a portrait of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

The reversal, in an infamous five-year-old case from Kerman, in central Iran, has produced anger and controversy, with lawyers calling it corrupt and newspapers giving it prominence.

“The psychological consequences of this case in the city have been great, and a lot of people have lost their confidence in the judicial system,” Nemat Ahmadi, a lawyer associated with the case, said in a telephone interview.

Three lower court rulings found all the men guilty of murder. Their cases had been appealed to the Supreme Court, which overturned the guilty verdicts. The latest decision, made public this week, reaffirms that reversal.

“The objection by the relatives of the victims is dismissed, and the ruling of this court is confirmed,” the court said in a one-page verdict.

The ruling may still not be final, however, because a lower court in Kerman can appeal the decision to the full membership of the Supreme Court. More than 50 Supreme Court judges would then take part in the final decision.

According to the Supreme Court’s earlier decision, the killers, who are members of the Basiji Force, volunteer vigilantes favored by the country’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, and President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, considered their victims morally corrupt and, according to Islamic teachings and Iran’s Islamic penal code, their blood could therefore be shed.

The last victims, for example, were a young couple engaged to be married who the killers claimed were walking together in public.

Members of the Basiji Force are known for attacking reformist politicians and pro-democracy meetings. President Ahmadinejad was a member of the force, but the Supreme Court judges who issued the ruling are not considered to be specifically affiliated with it.

Iran’s Islamic penal code, which is a parallel system to its civic code, says murder charges can be dropped if the accused can prove the killing was carried out because the victim was morally corrupt.

This is true even if the killer identified the victim mistakenly as corrupt. In that case, the law requires “blood money” to be paid to the family. Every year in Iran, a senior cleric determines the amount of blood money required in such cases. This year it is $40,000 if the victim is a Muslim man, and half that for a Muslim woman or a non-Muslim.

In a long interview with the Iranian Student News Agency, a Supreme Court judge, Mohammad Sadegh Al-e-Eshagh, who did not take part in this case, sought Wednesday to discourage vigilante killings, saying those carried out without a court order should be punished.

At the same time, he laid out examples of moral corruption that do permit bloodshed, including armed banditry, adultery by a wife and insults to the Prophet Muhammad.

“The roots of the problems are in our laws,” said Mohammad Seifzadeh, a lawyer and a member of the Association for Defenders of Human Rights in Tehran. “Such cases happen as long as we have laws that allow the killer to decide whether the victim is corrupt or not. Ironically, such laws show that the establishment is not capable of bringing justice, and so it leaves it to ordinary people to do it.”

The ruling stems from a case in 2002 in Kerman that began after the accused watched a tape by a senior cleric who ruled that Muslims could kill a morally corrupt person if the law failed to confront that person.

Some 17 people were killed in gruesome ways after that viewing, but only five deaths were linked to this group. The six accused, all in their early 20s, explained to the court that they had taken their victims outside the city after they had identified them. Then they stoned them to death or drowned them in a pond by sitting on their chests.

Three of the families had given their consent under pressure by the killers’ families to accept financial compensation, said Mr. Ahmadi, the lawyer.

Such killings have occurred in the past. A member of the security forces shot and killed a young man in 2005 in the subway in Karaj, near Tehran, for what he also claimed was immoral behavior by the victim.

A judge caused outrage in 2004 in Neka, in the north, after he issued a death sentence for a 16-year old girl for what he said were chastity crimes. After the summary trial, he had her hanged in public immediately, before the necessary approval from the Supreme Court.

Neither man has been punished.

“Such laws are not acceptable in our society today,” said Hossein Nejad Malayeri, the brother of Gholamreza Nejad Malayeri, who was killed by the group in Kerman. “That means if somebody has money, he can kill, and claim the victim was corrupt.”



And its ironic, because u would think a country who is SOOO dedicated to a religion would be like Swiz, a very peaceful country. Turn out the enlightenment was right. Seperating church and states allows the Church to do what its suppose to do, and does not tangle ti with politics. When the Church and state are apart the Church can be pure. The pope uses his position to denounce violence now, and the ayatollah uses it to.... borrow americna technology like nuclear power and claim it as their own, and wage holy wars. Tisk tisk. These people give islam a bad name.


Forget me not

Forget the killer, i refuse to say his name or show his picucture. TO do that would be to hold him above the victims. 10 years from now i expect myself to remember the victims not the Killer. He wanted this attention, and i refuse to justify him. Here are the people who mattered.

http://www.nytimes.com/ref/us/20070418_VICTIMS_GRAPHIC.html

i would put them on here, but i cannot seem ot get thier pictures to work for me.

Once in anceitn greece, a man burned down a famous temple, his peers asked him why. He told them he wanted to be remembered, so the Greeks erased his name forever. We still dont know his name. We need to to the same thing. Remember the victim and forget the attention whore.


Wednesday, February 14, 2007

Serb parliament rejects Kosovo plan




Serbian politicians have reacted angrily to UN plans to give Kosovo virtual independence [AFP]

Serbia's new parliament has overwhelmingly rejected a United Nations plan to give virtual independence to the breakaway province of Kosovo.
 
The 250-member parliament voted 225-15 on Wednesday to reject the plan, which was drafted by Martti Ahtisaari, the UN envoy to the region.

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The parliament adopted a resolution saying Ahtisaari's draft "breaches fundamental principles of international law" and "illegally lays the foundation for the creation of a new independent state on the territory of Serbia".

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Four MPs abstained and six more were absent from the vote in the inaugural parliamentary session after January's elections.
 
President denounces UN plan
 
Boris Tadic, Serbia's pro-Western president, told parliament that Ahtisaari's plan "essentially opens the way for an independent Kosovo, which is a violation of the essential principles of the UN charter, which guarantees inviolability of internationally-recognised states."
 
Vojislav Kostunica, the acting prime minister, said the plan "wants to dismember Serbia and grab 15 per cent of its territory".
 
Tomislav Nikolic, a leader of the Radical Party - the biggest group in Serbia's new parliament - hailed the parliament's resolution, saying "no one can create a new country on Serbia's territory without Serbia's consent".
 
Although it does not specify that Kosovo will be independent, the UN draft envisages internationally supervised self-rule for the southern province, including a flag, anthem, army, constitution and the right to join international organisations.
 
Agim Ceku, Kosovo's prime minister, responded to the parliamentary vote by saying that Serbia's views would have no impact on the future status of the province.


Okay, okay, so i know the Un should not rump around telling serbia what to do, BUT i know the area is not ethnicaly serb and has been pushing for independence for a while. So Serbia... the country that triggered WWI becuase it wanted freedom from Austria-Hungry is no denying another nation that is just like it was? Ha. Ha.


Tuesday, February 13, 2007

Women's bill in Pakistan assembly
Women's protest outside national assembly in Islamabad
Pakistani women demanding greater rights
Pakistan's national assembly has begun work on a bill to safeguard women's rights to property and inheritance.

The Prevention of Anti-Women Practices Bill seeks to ban various customs that deny women the right to marry or subject them to forced marriages.

Last November the assembly overcame bitter opposition from Islamic parties to amend the country's controversial rape laws.

The new bill is a key part of plans to empower women, the government says.

The position of women in Pakistan has come under intense international scrutiny, partly because of a number of high-profile rape cases.

Hope

"The bill seeks to correct the wrongs committed against women," the head of the ruling PMLQ party, Chaudhry Shujaat Hussain, said while tabling the bill.

"I hope that sections of the opposition that supported us on women's issues earlier would back this bill as well."

Last November the Pakistan People's Party (PPP) of former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto put aside its differences with the government to support the changes in the rape laws.

The new bill criminalises customs such as vanni and swara, in which young girls are given away in marriage to settle murder feuds.

It prescribes a maximum of three years' imprisonment for offenders in these cases.

In addition, the bill prescribes up to seven years in jail for those who deprive a woman of her right to property.

It further seeks to punish the practice of marrying women to the Koran with up to three years in jail.

Koran marriages are aimed at preventing a woman from contracting a normal marriage and bearing children who could then claim her share in ancestral property.

The bill proposes that husbands who bring charges of infidelity against their wives under Islamic law but fail in their cases could face charges of slander.

In such cases, the wife would be given the power to initiate divorce proceedings.



Cool. Go them!



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