Tuesday, February 3, 2015
Iranian Acid-Attack Punishment Delayed As Physicians Refuse To Administer Sentence
Mohabat News
_ But his punishment has been delayed as physicians have refused to
administer the sentence, according to an Iranian judicial official who
recently spoke to domestic media.
The
official, introduced as Judge Dashtban, oversees the implementation of
judicial sentences in one of the Iranian capital's districts.
Dashtban
said earlier this week that a court has ordered a "surgical operation"
to be performed on the eye and ear of the attacker, identified as Hamid
S, but he added that no doctor has agreed to take on the job yet.
"No
physician has accepted to apply Qisas [the Islamic law of retribution]
on the eye and ear of the convict through surgery," Dashtban was quoted
as saying by Iranian media on January 22.
It wasn't clear when the sentence was issued. The acid attack occurred in 2005.
The
victim, Davood Roshanayi, has said that he was walking in Tehran's
Majidiyeh neighborhood when he noticed someone was following him.
He said he didn't know the man.
Based on Roshanayi's account, the man splashed him with a jar of acid when he asked him why he was chasing him.
Roshanayi lost his left eye and right ear and he was badly disfigured as the result of the assault.
"My
hands, legs, and my chest were also hurt in the incident and I have
only 20 percent of vision in my right eye," he said in a 2012 interview
with the semiofficial ISNA news agency.
"It would be better if I was asked which part of my body had been left unharmed in the incident," he added.
Roshanayi
said the attacker had at different stages offered various "excuses" for
his action, including that he had mistaken his victim for someone else.
Dashtban
said the bureau of forensic medicine is in charge of overseeing the
implementation of the sentence against Hamid S, which has been confirmed
by Iran's Supreme Court.
"We can't tell the forensic office or a doctor that 'You have to do this,'" he said
Dashtban
added that, at one point, the prerequisites were in place for the
sentence to be carried out. But he said that, a day before the scheduled
date, the family of the victim offered some conditions under which they
would give up their demand for the retribution punishment to be
implemented.
"After two months, the
family of the convict announced that they couldn't fulfill the
conditions and the victim renewed his demand for the sentence to be
administered," he said.
Norway-based
Iranian lawyer and human rights advocate Mohammad Mostafaei says the
judgment against Hamid S. is highly unusual in the Islamic republic.
Islamic
law adheres to the notion of an "eye for an eye" under the Qisas
principle, but Mostafaei says making such rulings is very complicated
due to the many conditions that need to be fulfilled.
For example, he says it has to be demonstrated that the intention of the attacker was to blind the victim.
"In
these cases, the people's aim is to destroy the beauty of their
victims, but they might not intend to make them blind," Mostafaei told
RFE/RL.
He said that, according to
Iranian laws, if a person is killed in an acid attack, the perpetrator
is sentenced to death. In other cases, he says, perpetrators are usually
sentenced to prison and ordered to pay compensation.
Violating Medical Ethics
In
a 2011 case that garnered lots of media attention, a court ordered acid
to be dropped into the eyes of a man who had blinded and badly
disfigured a woman in 2004.
The
sentence was not carried out after the victim, Ameneh Bahrami -- who had
originally supported the punishment and had expressed a willingness to
do it herself -- pardoned her assailant.
Mostafaei says obliging a doctor to administer such a punishment would violate medical ethical codes.
"It is totally against their oath to heal the sick and not harm anyone," he said.
Iranian media report that Roshanayi is eager for the Qisas sentence against his attacker to be carried out.
In his interview with ISNA, Roshanayi said he was hoping to receive compensation money to pursue needed medical treatment.
Last
December, judiciary spokesman Gholam Hossein Mohseni Ejei said
sentences in the case of two acid attacks will be carried out and that a
Qisas punishment would be administered on the eyes of the convicted
attackers, meaning that they will be blinded.
He
didn't provide details about the cases. But he acknowledged
"difficulties" in the "medical system" in administering acid-attack
sentences.
According to reports, one
of the two cases involves a 2012 acid attack against Mohsen Mortazavi
who lost one of his eyes and was horrifically disfigured when a
colleague splashed him with three liters of acid.
His
attacker has been reportedly sentenced to the administration of Qisas
on one eye and ear. He has also been ordered to pay financial
compensation.
Mostafaei said the sentences violate human rights and amount to torture.
"The aim of these sentences is to create fear among people [and prevent such attacks]," he added.
Last
October, a string of acid attacks targeted a number of young women in
the city of Isfahan. Some of the victims were badly burned, disfigured,
and blinded.
Authorities say they
have so far not been able to identify and arrest the perpetrators of the
attacks, but they have vowed tough punishment against the assailants./ Radio -rferl
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