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Gays
Deserve Torture, Death Penalty, Iranian
Minister Says
Monday , November 12, 2007
By Dominic Kennedy
[The London Times]
Homosexuals
deserve to be executed or tortured and possibly both, an Iranian leader told
British MPs during a private meeting at a peace conference, The Times has
learned.
Mohsen Yahyavi
is the highest-ranked politician to admit that Iran believes in the death
penalty for homosexuality after a spate of reports that gay youths were being
hanged.
President Ahmadinejad,
questioned by students in New York two months ago about the executions, dodged
the issue by suggesting that there were no gays in his country.
Britain regularly challenges
Iran about its gay hangings, stonings and executions of adulterers and
perceived moral criminals, Foreign and Commonwealth Office (FCO) papers show.
The latest row involves a woman
hanged this June in the town of Gorgan after becoming pregnant by her brother.
He was absolved after expressing his remorse. Britain said that this
demonstrated the unequal treatment of men and women in law and breached
Iran’s pledge to restrict the death penalty to the most serious crimes.
A series of reported executions
of gays, including two underage boys whose public hanging was posted on the
internet, has alarmed human rights campaigners.
The Pet Shop
Boys dedicated Fundamental, their Grammy-nominated album, to Mahmoud Asqari
and Ayad Marhouni, who were hanged in Justice Square in Mashhad in 2005.
Graphic photographs of the execution of the youths, who were under 18 when
arrested, were released by the Iranian Students News Agency.
Gay rights groups in Britain,
such as Outrage!, accuse Iran of cloaking executions for homosexuality with
bogus charges for more serious crimes.
Under the Freedom of
Information Act, the FCO released papers to The Times about the
death penalty being used in Iran for homosexuality, adultery and sex outside
marriage.
Minutes taken by an official
describe a meeting between British and Iranian MPs at the Inter-Parliamentary
Union, a peace body, in May. When the Britons raised the hangings of Asqari
and Marhouni, the leader of the Iranian delegation, Mr Yahyavi, a member of
his parliament’s energy committee, was unflinching. He "explained that
according to Islam gays and lesbianism were not permitted," the record
states. "He said that if homosexual activity is in private there is no
problem, but those in overt activity should be executed [he initially said
tortured but changed it to executed]. He argued that homosexuality is against
human nature and that humans are here to reproduce. Homosexuals do not
reproduce."
Nicole Pichet, a researcher who
also took notes of the gathering, told The Times that the discussion began
with British MPs discussing the underage gay hangings. Mr Yahyavi responded by
saying homosexuality was to blame for a lot of diseases such as Aids.
Ann Clwyd, the Labor MP and
head of Britain’s delegation, said yesterday: "It is of great concern
that these attitudes persist and we made it clear what we felt."
Iran, Mauritania, Saudi Arabia,
Sudan, the United Arab Emirates, Yemen and Nigeria apply the death penalty for
homosexuality, according to the International Lesbian and Gay Association.
Sharia’s Victims
2005
— Homosexuals Farbod Mostaar
and Ahmad Chooka sentenced to death. Iran said Chooka had kidnapped, knifed
and raped a student
— A woman called Soghra was
sentenced to stoning for adultery and being an accomplice to her husband’s
murder
— Two men executed in public
after being found guilty of a homosexual relationship. A newspaper said they
were convicted of sodomy, rape and kidnapping
— Zhila Izadi, 13, sentenced
to stoning after becoming pregnant with her brother’s child
2006
— Malek Ghorbany sentenced to
stoning for adultery
— Leila Qomi sentenced to
stoning for adultery and assisting a man who killed her husband. He received
100 lashes
2007
— Jafar Kiana stoned for
adultery. His female lover Mokarrameh Ebrahimi sentenced to the same fate
Source: Foreign and
Commonwealth Office documents released under Freedom of Information Act
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