[Deathpenalty] death penalty news----worldwide

Rick Halperin rhalperi at smu.edu
Tue Jun 12 08:10:07 CDT 2018





June 12




IRAN:

Iranian Kurdish Dissident Facing Execution Suffers Legal Blow



A lawyer for an Iranian Kurdish man sentenced to death for belonging to a 
Kurdish nationalist group says his client has suffered a major legal setback in 
a bid to escape execution.

Speaking to VOA Persian by phone Monday from Tehran, lawyer Hossein Ahmadiniaz 
said Iran's Supreme Court has rejected an appeal to spare the life of his 
client, Ramin Hossein Panahi.

"By law, the Supreme Court should have responded to my request for an appeal by 
stopping the [death penalty] from proceeding and reviewing the case in its 
entirety," Ahmadiniaz said. "Unfortunately, they did not do that for my client 
- they just skimmed through the case."

Ahmadiniaz said he will file a 2nd appeal against Panahi's sentence, but did 
not explain how that will proceed. "I will do my utmost to use all legal 
procedures to get justice for my client," Ahmadiniaz said.

Panahi, who is in his 20s, was arrested in June 2017 for allegedly belonging to 
Kurdish nationalist group Komala and drawing a weapon against Iranian security 
forces who were carrying out a raid in the region. An Iranian court sentenced 
him to death in January. Since then, Panahi has been imprisoned in the 
northwestern city of Sanandaj.

A U.N. human rights expert issued a call last month for Iran to immediately 
halt and annul Panahi's death sentence. In a May 2 statement, Agnes Callamard, 
the U.N. Special Rapporteur on extrajudicial, summary or arbitrary executions, 
said her office was concerned about allegations that Panahi had not received a 
fair trial and was mistreated and tortured in detention.

In a report published Sunday, Iranian state-run news site ISNA acknowledged 
Callamard's concerns, saying no evidence linking Panahi to any "intentional 
killing" was presented at his trial.

A Europe-based brother of Panahi told VOA Persian last month that authorities 
took Panahi from Sanandaj prison to an unknown location on May 1, prompting 
concerns of an imminent execution. But the brother said authorities returned 
Panahi to Sanandaj the next day and placed him in the prison's public ward 
rather than death row, where he had been kept previously.

Panahi's return to the Sanandaj prison coincided with Callamard's appeal for an 
annulment of his death sentence and a social media campaign by his supporters 
also seeking clemency for him.

Social media users concerned that Panahi still could be executed after the 
Islamic holy month of Ramadan ends this week have intensified their campaign in 
recent days. Twitter users posted at least 53,000 tweets with the hashtag 
#SOSRamin from Saturday into Sunday. SOS is an international code used to warn 
of extreme distress.

(source: voanews.com)








BANGLADESH:

2 heroin peddlers get death penalty



terday sentenced 2 drug paddlers to death.

The court of Metropolitan Sessions Judge Mujibur Rahman Bhuiyan also fined 
Hossain Ahmed Manik and Parvez Alam Sumon Tk 1 lakh each, said Additional 
Public Prosecutor Mofur Ali.

They are from Beanibazar upazila. Parvez is in Sylhet Central Jail and Manik on 
the run. According to the prosecution, a parcel was received at Sylhet Post 
Office from Pakistan on March 9, 2014.

When postal supervisor inspected it, he found 8.025 grammes of heroin in it. 
The postal department filed a case with Daksin Surma Police Station.

Police found the drug peddler through the phone number mentioned on the parcel.

****************************

New law to ensure capital punishment for drug kingpins



Home Minister Asaduzzaman Khan Kamal yesterday told the parliament that the 
government has drafted a new law to ensure capital punishment for masterminds, 
godfathers and patrons of illegal drug trading.

In reply to lawmakers' queries, the minister also informed the parliament that 
there is no visible progress in stopping yaba smuggling in Bangladesh from 
Myanmar due to lack of good intentions of Myanmar authorities.

On bringing godfathers of drug trade to book, Kamal said in the existing 
Narcotics Control Act 1990, there is a provision for capital punishment for 
drug criminals. But according to the law, there is no option of taking actions 
if drug is not found in someone's possession. That's how masterminds escape the 
law easily.

In a bid to take tougher actions against patrons and godfathers of drug trade, 
the government has drafted Narcotics Control Act 2018 keeping the provision for 
death penalty against them, Kamal said.

Besides, the home minister also said officials of the respective directorate 
who investigate money laundering related crimes will be empowered to bring drug 
kingpins to book.

About the ongoing drive against drugs, the minister said it is going on 
according to the list of drug traders to bring drug patrons and godfathers 
under the purview of the law.

In response to another query, Kamal informed the House that Bangladesh and 
India so far held 5 director general level meetings to stop illegal transport 
of drugs from India to Bangladesh which were effective.

On stopping yaba being smuggled from Myanmar, the minister said Bangladesh and 
Myanmar so far held 3 bilateral meetings on preventing yaba smuggling.

"In every meeting, we have exchanged intelligence reports on yaba manufacturing 
factories in Myanmar, requesting them to stop production and supply of yaba in 
Bangladesh," Kamal said.

"But there is no visible progress in this regard," he added.

On the anti-narcotics drive, he said a total of 35,112 accused drug traders 
were arrested from January to March in 2018 in connection with 27, 340 cases.

Over 3.28 crore pieces of yaba were recovered during the time, said the 
minister.

(source for both: The Daily Star)








PAKISTAN:

Pak SC rejects appeal of convict for raping and killing 6-year-old girl



Pakistan Supreme Court today rejected an appeal of a convict for raping and 
killing a 6-year-old girl and upheld his death sentence in a crime that drew 
nationwide condemnation and led to widespread protests across the country, 
according to a media report.

A 3-judge bench at the Lahore registry, comprising Justices Asif Saeed Khosa, 
Manzoor Ahmed Malik and Mansoor Ali Shah, rejected convict Imran Ali's appeal, 
upholding the death penalty handed to him by an anti-terrorism court (ATC), 
Dawn News reported.

The ATC gave him 4 counts of the death penalty, 1 life term, a 7-year jail term 
and Rs 41 lakh in fines.

The 4 death penalties were for kidnapping, raping and murdering the 6-year-old 
girl, and for committing an act of terrorism.

Ali faces further charges in the cases of at least 7 other children he attacked 
5 of whom were murdered in a spate of assaults that had stoked fears a serial 
child killer was on the loose, the report said.

He had appealed to the Lahore High Court against the sentence but his appeal 
was dismissed.

The 6-year-old girl went missing on January 4 and was found dead in a trash 
heap in Kasur on January 9. Her rape and murder had sparked outrage and 
protests across the country.

The heinous nature of the crime had seen immediate riots break out in Kasur in 
which two people were killed while the incident became a rallying cry for an 
end to violence against children.

(source: business-standard.com)








MALAYSIA:

Drugs: Trio may face death



3 suspects may face the death penalty if found guilty after police found them 
with 1.9kg of cannabis believed obtained from a supplier in Kuala Lumpur via 
WeChat.

An operation carried out near a hotel at Bundusan at about 6pm last Friday saw 
a man and woman being nabbed with 6gm of the drug in their car.

District Police Chief DSP Mohd Haris Ibrahim said another suspect believed to 
be the supplier, who was walking towards the vehicle, tried to flee upon 
noticing police presence.

"He threw away a Poslaju package while trying to flee," Haris told a press 
conference at IPD Penampang, Monday.

He said the suspects allegedly received their supply from a dealer in Chow Kit, 
Kuala Lumpur.

After making an arrangement via WeChat, the drug is sent over through Poslaju.

He added that the drug seized was worth about RM5,000. The case is being 
investigated under Section 39B of the Dangerous Drugs Act 1952 which could lead 
to the death penalty and under Section 6 of the same Act which leads to a fine 
or jail, or both.

In another drug case, police arrested 2 men believed to be in their 20s, one of 
them a local, in a bust at a house at Kampung Luyang Baru, here, at about 
1.30pm on the same day.

The suspects attempted to evade arrest which led to 1 of them sustaining 
injuries on his face, back and legs from falling.

Further investigations led to the discovery of a packet of Syabu weighing 
5.01gm from the suspect.

The case is being investigated under Section 39A(1) of the Dangerous Drugs Act 
1952.

(source: Daily Express)



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