| 
   The Sunday
  Mirror 
   
  EXCLUSIVE JUSTICE IRAN STYLE: SICK GIRL EXECUTED BY JUDGE SHE DEFIED Her
  crime? She had sex with an unmarried man  
   
  By Susie Boniface  
   
   IT
  WAS exactly 6am and the start of another blisteringly hot summer day when
  16-year-old Atefeh Rajabi
  was dragged from her prison cell and taken to be executed.  
   
  Every step of the way the troubled teenager plagued by mental problems
  shouted "repentance, repentance" as the militiamen marched her to
  the town's Railway Square.
   
   
  The Iranian judge who had sentenced Atefeh to death
  was left unmoved as he personally put the noose around her neck and signalled to the crane driver.  
   
  Kicking and screaming, Atefeh was left dangling for
  45 minutes from the arm of the crane as the crowd sobbed and - under their
  breath - damned the mullahs.  
   
  Atefeh's crime? Offending public morality. She was
  found guilty of "acts incompatible with chastity" by having sex
  with an unmarried man, even though friends say Atefeh
  was in such a fragile mental state that she wasn't in a position to say no.  
   
  But Judge Haji Rezaii was
  determined she should hang, regardless of the rules of international law
  which say only adults over 18 can be executed, and that the courts have a
  duty to children and the mentally ill.  
   
  The brutal end to Atefeh's short life has shone a
  new light on Iran's
  Shariah law, where adultery, theft and rape all
  carry the same punishment - death. Officially around 100 people - some just
  children like Atefeh - are executed each year. But
  human rights groups say the true figure could be much higher in a country
  where only half of the women can read, only one in 10 have a job and
  two-thirds are beaten in their homes.  
   
  Life was never easy for Atefeh, who was brought up
  in the industrial town of Neka,
  250 miles from Tehran and close to the Caspian Sea. Her mother died when she was a child and
  her father Ghasseem, a heroin addict, left her
  grandparents to bring her up. She suffered from bi-polar disorder, which led
  to severe mood swings from hyperactivity to depression. Worried parents told
  their children to stay away from her - something many regret now. "Perhaps
  we should have helped her instead," said Hamid. "I think the death
  of her mother had a devastating effect. Before that, she was a normal girl.
  Her mother was everything to her. After she died, there was no one to look
  after her."  
   
  Mina, a childhood friend, said Atefeh was abused by
  a close relative. "She never dared talk about it with an adult,"
  said Mina. "If she had told her teacher they'd have called her a whore. Tell
  the police? They lock you up and rape you." Atefeh
  first appeared in court, accused of having sex with an unmarried man at 14. Over
  the next two years she was accused of the same crime with different men.  
   
  They denied it and were sentenced to the lash and then released. But Atefeh pleaded guilty and each time received 100 lashes
  and a prison term. Mina said: "Atefeh
  sometimes talked about what these 'moral' Islamic policemen did to her while
  she was in jail. She still had nightmares about that. Atefeh
  said her mood swings made it easy for men to take advantage of her, and that
  most of her lovers were in the security force."  
   
  Two of them were members of the anti-vice militia. They encouraged other men
  to sign statements saying Atefeh had engaged in
  vice, and even claimed she had AIDS.  
   
  It was when Atefeh appeared before Judge Rezaii for a fourth time that she lost her temper - and
  also her life. In a rage she tore off her hi jab - a headscarf - and told the
  judge she had been raped and it was his duty to punish her tormentors, not
  their victim.  
   
  Rezaii told her she would hang for her "sharp
  tongue" and that he would put the noose around her neck himself. It became
  a personal crusade as he travelled to Tehran and convinced
  the Supreme Court to uphold his verdict.  
   
  Two petitions by her friends, saying she was mentally unwell, were ignored. Her
  father produced her birth certificate proving she was 16. Yet the judges
  "decreed" she was 22.  
   
  Atefeh also wrote to the Supreme Court: "There
  are medical documents that prove I have a weak nerve and soul. In some
  minutes of the day and night I lose my sanity. In a society where an insane
  person can be serially raped it is no wonder that a person like me is the
  victim of such an ugly act."  
   
  The day before she died she wrote again, saying: "Repentance,
  repentance, repentance." In Iranian law anyone who shows remorse has an
  automatic stay of execution and a right to appeal, but she was ignored.  
   
  A local pharmacist watched Atefeh's execution on
  August 15, 2004. "She looked so young standing there," he said. "Rezaii must have felt a personal grudge against her. He
  put the rope around her neck himself. I looked around and everyone in the
  crowd was sobbing and damning the mullahs." The family's lawyer has now
  filed a suit of wrongful execution against the judge and is preparing a
  murder case. Her life is also the subject of a secretly filmed documentary,
  Execution of a Teenage Girl, which will be screened on BBC2 on Thursday.  
   
  One of Atefeh's teachers said the authorities
  wanted to make an example of her: "She wouldn't take injustice from
  anyone, but the mullahs equate these qualities in a girl to prostitution and
  evil. They wanted to give all the girls and women a lesson."  
   
  Amnesty International UK director Kate Allen said: "The killing of Atefeh is a catalogue of the most appalling human rights
  violations. The public hanging of a child, believed to be mentally
  incompetent, totally beggars belief. To hang a child flies in the face of all
  that is humane."  
   
  CRUELTY OF SHARIA LAW  
   
  PENALTIES imposed by Iran's
  religious mullahs include:  
   
  THEFT: Amputation of hands or feet for persistent offenders.  
   
  ADULTERY: Death by stoning.  
   
  UNMARRIED SEX: 100 lashes.  
   
  CONVERSION TO RELIGION OTHER THAN ISLAM: Death.  
   
  SODOMY: Death for adults, 74 lashes for consenting child.  
   
  LESBIANISM: 100 lashes, or on the fourth occasion death.  
   
  HOMOSEXUAL KISS: 60 lashes.  
   
  RUBBING ANOTHER MAN'S THIGHS OR BUTTOCKS: 99 lashes
  - on 4th occasion, death. 
   |