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Feminism: Sex and gender discussions

A young woman named Shahnaz hanged in Qezel-Hesar prison in Karaj, Iran

31 replies

IwantToRetire · 28/04/2024 00:06

According to the Iranian state-media reports, at dawn on Wednesday, April 24, 2024, a young woman named Shahnaz was hanged in Qezel-Hesar prison in Karaj.Shahnaz had been held in prison for three years. She is the fifth woman hanged in Iran in 2024.

According to the information compiled by the Women’s Committee of the National Council of Resistance of Iran, with the execution of Shahnaz, the number of women executed in Iran since 2007 has reached 234.

Record holder of executions of womenThe Iranian regime is the world’s top record holder of executions of women.

No government in the world has executed so many women. The list does not account for the tens of thousands of women executed in Iran on political grounds.

The NCRI Women’s Committee previously mentioned that many of the women executed by the mullahs’ regime are themselves victims of domestic violence against women and have acted in self-defense.
An average of 15 women were executed every year under the former government in Iran.

However, 26 women were executed under Raisi government in 2023, which is 11 more than the previous average.

The NCRI Women’s Committee calls on the United Nations, the European Union, and other relevant international organizations to take urgent action to save the lives of those on death row and stop the use of death penalty in Iran.

https://women.ncr-iran.org/2024/04/26/shahnaz/

Shahnaz hanged in Karaj

Shahnaz, a young woman, hanged in Qezel-Hesar prison, Iran

At dawn on Wednesday, April 24, 2024, a young woman named Shahnaz was hanged in Qezel-Hesar prison in Karaj, Iran.

https://women.ncr-iran.org/2024/04/26/shahnaz

OP posts:
Waitwhat23 · 28/04/2024 09:54

Awful and it sounds like the numbers are increasing.

From the article, this was particularly chilling -

'The list does not account for the tens of thousands of women executed in Iran on political grounds'

Tens of thousands. Fucking hell.

stickygotstuck · 28/04/2024 09:59

This is absolute awful.

Will it take to stop these despicable, fanatic men murdering Iran's women with impunity?

RainWithSunnySpells · 28/04/2024 10:06

'The NCRI Women’s Committee previously mentioned that many of the women executed by the mullahs’ regime are themselves victims of domestic violence against women and have acted in self-defense.'

It's really shocking that this is happening NOW.

IwantToRetire · 28/04/2024 21:37

We have received information that uniformed and plainclothes police in Iran are enforcing a violent crackdown throughout the country against women and girls under the country’s strict hijab laws – as well as men supporting them. We have received reports of widespread arrests and harassment of women and girls - many between the ages of 15 and 17.

On 21 April, the Tehran head of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) announced the creation of a new body to enforce existing mandatory hijab laws, adding that IRGC members have been trained to do so “in a more serious manner” in public spaces. Reports indicate that hundreds of businesses have been forcibly closed for not enforcing compulsory hijab laws, and surveillance cameras are being used to identify women drivers not complying with the laws.
Our Office is also very concerned that a draft bill on "Supporting the Family by Promoting the Culture of Chastity and Hijab" – which imposes even stricter punishments– is nearing final approval by the Guardian Council.

While the latest draft of the bill has not been made public, an earlier version stipulates that those found guilty of violating the mandatory dress code could face up to 10 years’ imprisonment, flogging, and fines. Corporal punishment constitutes a form of cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment, and any detention, imposed for the exercise of fundamental freedoms, is arbitrary under international law. We reiterate that this bill must be shelved.

https://www.ohchr.org/en/press-briefing-notes/2024/04/iran-crackdown-hijab-law

OP posts:
littlbrowndog · 28/04/2024 21:40

So so sad to read this. All these women murdered in the name of a religion breaks my heart

ScarletPimpernel · 28/04/2024 21:53

That's so sad. RIP Shahnaz.

highame · 29/04/2024 08:44

I am so sad. Nothing changes. This is the Iran that funds Hamas, that is so loved by our Progressive, right side of history thinkers

Noicant · 29/04/2024 08:47

I was on a reddit page for Iranians against the regime, there were videos of police just removing women from the street. Just vile, utterly vile regime.

💐 for Shanaz.

Terref · 29/04/2024 08:56

Horrific.

terryleather · 29/04/2024 09:04

Beyond horrific.

MoggyP · 29/04/2024 09:05

According to Amnesty International, Iran executes well over 700 people a year (in some years, such as one when they had a drugs clampdown, it can be many more). So with 15 women executed, that makes the proportion of women just over 2%

USA presents its figures differently (and as the overall numbers are much smaller, they hop around more between years) but looking at 2023, the proportion of women was just over 4%

I am against the death penalty, regardless of who is being executed.

ScarletPimpernel · 29/04/2024 10:26

Iran executes well over 700 people a year (in some years, such as one when they had a drugs clampdown, it can be many more). So with 15 women executed, that makes the proportion of women just over 2%

A thread about one woman being executed is not the place for this. If you think this is important please start a thread for it rather than hijacking this one.

sprigatito · 29/04/2024 10:33

This reply has been deleted

Message deleted by MNHQ. Here's a link to our Talk Guidelines.

Ofcourseshecan · 29/04/2024 10:37

highame · 29/04/2024 08:44

I am so sad. Nothing changes. This is the Iran that funds Hamas, that is so loved by our Progressive, right side of history thinkers

Sadly true. We are safer than women in Iran because the UK is a safer place generally. The increasing openness of male contempt for women, though, including support for the 7 October rapists and murderers, is intimidating.

quantumbutterfly · 29/04/2024 11:02

stickygotstuck · 28/04/2024 09:59

This is absolute awful.

Will it take to stop these despicable, fanatic men murdering Iran's women with impunity?

An underground railroad ?

mrshoho · 29/04/2024 20:16

Deplorable. This is just sickening. May Shanaz and all those murdered women rest in peace. 💐

DuesToTheDirt · 29/04/2024 20:38

Vile, vile regime. Any country that controls its people with capital punishment is despicable.

PermanentTemporary · 29/04/2024 20:45

This is hideous. Thank you for posting.

IwantToRetire · 29/04/2024 21:13

Women Executed in Iran in 2023
2 were child brides
6 for murding their husbands
https://iranhr.net/en/articles/6606/

22 were for qisas for murder

As murder is specifically punished under qisas laws, the IPC does not explicitly state that convicted murderers are subject to the death penalty but rather to qisas, or “retribution-in-kind”. The law effectively puts the responsibility for executions for murder in the hands of the victim’s family or next of kin.

Qisas death sentences are also imposed for juvenile offenders as, according to Sharia, the age of criminal responsibility for girls is 9 and for boys 15 lunar years. Furthermore, the death penalty is generally subject to discriminatory application based on gender, ethnicity and religion.

https://iranhr.net/en/articles/5981/

OP posts:
EllaDisenchanted · 29/04/2024 21:28

💔 may her memory be a blessing. Meanwhile Iran chaired the human rights council social forum at the UN?!

Whycantiwinmillionsandsquillions · 29/04/2024 21:37

Absolutely horrific.

Waitwhat23 · 29/04/2024 21:40

In regards to the difference in the age of criminal responsibility between girls and boys, I found this -

journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/14732254211022854

Quote -

'A Gendered Minimum Age of Criminal Responsibility

Contextually, in Western states, girls have been subject to different standards than boys within justice systems, for example, regarding crimes of ‘sexuality’ (Pasko, 2017) or the provision of custodial placements within England and Wales, whereby there are no specific custodial facilities for girls and young women (Allen, 2016). However, most countries do not differentiate between boys and girls in matters of civil or criminal rights and responsibilities, including the MACR. However, within some Islamic countries, such as Iran, the gendered construction of childhood has resulted in a system of divided rights, with specific rights being granted to some children (boys) but not others (girls). By using the notion of ‘religious puberty’ as a measure of maturity, Iran, and some other Islamic countries such as Brunei Darussalam, Sudan, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, enable overt discrimination against girls, because the age at which religious puberty is deemed to have been reached differs between boys and girls. The age of religious puberty is specified within the Civil Code of Iran and is considered to be the age at which a child is subject to all the rights, duties and responsibilities of an adult, including property ownership, marriage, religious duties and criminal responsibility (Hashemi, 2007). Boys in Iran are considered to have such responsibility when they are 15 lunar years old (14 years and 7 months), whereas girls are considered to have reached religious puberty a full 6 years earlier, at 9 lunar years (8 years and 9 months). The Islamic Penalties Act (2013) does not itself specify a chronological age of criminal responsibility, but effectively establishes it by reference to religious puberty, such that girls are held criminally responsible at the age of 9 lunar years, whereas boys are not deemed to have such responsibility unit they are 15 years.

The MACR in Iran thus is not delineated by the recommendations of the UN Committee on the Rights of the Child nor on an understanding of child development but is based on powerful religious doctrine – the interpretation of which is used to mask the commitments to the UNCRC. It is of note that 15 years old is a reasonable MACR and is above the UNCRC’s suggested minimum (UNCRC, 2019) and higher than the median age across the globe. This apparent accordance with international guidance – for boys – makes the low MACR for girls even more unacceptable. Indeed, the Concluding Observations on Iran made by the UN Committee (2016a) reiterated the need for Iran, as a matter of priority, to increase the MACR for girls and ensure that girls and boys are treated on equal terms throughout the criminal justice system. Furthermore, the Committee questioned the wide discretion given to the judiciary in interpreting and implementing Sharia, such as relating the age of marriage and the age of criminal responsibility to the notion of religious puberty, especially when there is limited justification for the specific age at which religious puberty is deemed to have been achieved.

The gendered approach to the MACR in Iran creates a 6-year disparity between the protections ascribed to boys and girls; this disparity perpetuates the perceived difference in capacity and status between girls and boys in other areas too. Setting an MACR of 9 years creates a social (symbolic) and statutory (institutionalised) construction of the girl child as being mature, responsibilised and adultified (Goldson, 2013). This image of a mature girl child can then be used to further subjugate girls to the control of men, for example, constructing girls as sexually mature – and therefore, sexually available and of an age to be married. Setting a low MACR, linked to the notion of religious puberty, does not take into account the impact of social conditions on children’s development or their ability to exercise free will. This may be particularly an issue for women and girls in Iran who face subjugation and control in so many areas of their lives (Kusha, 2002). For instance, in the legal system of the Islamic Republic of Iran the gender of the witness influences the perceived validity of the testimony. In some cases, the testimony of a woman is only used to substantiate a man’s testimony and in others, where the testimony of a woman is considered valid, the testimony of a man is deemed equivalent to the testimony of two women (Mehrpoor, 2002). This illustrates the contradictory nature of the Iranian gender ideology: on one hand, girls are deemed mature and hence responsible for their actions, yet on the other hand, when they reach the age of puberty, their rationality is questioned due to their gender.'

DuesToTheDirt · 29/04/2024 21:41

IwantToRetire · 29/04/2024 21:13

Women Executed in Iran in 2023
2 were child brides
6 for murding their husbands
https://iranhr.net/en/articles/6606/

22 were for qisas for murder

As murder is specifically punished under qisas laws, the IPC does not explicitly state that convicted murderers are subject to the death penalty but rather to qisas, or “retribution-in-kind”. The law effectively puts the responsibility for executions for murder in the hands of the victim’s family or next of kin.

Qisas death sentences are also imposed for juvenile offenders as, according to Sharia, the age of criminal responsibility for girls is 9 and for boys 15 lunar years. Furthermore, the death penalty is generally subject to discriminatory application based on gender, ethnicity and religion.

https://iranhr.net/en/articles/5981/

So the law allows them to execute 9-year old girls? Confused And 15-year old boys (not much better, but a big contrast to the girls). According to the article, "only" 3 juvenile executions in 2022, no ages given, but still...

Kendodd · 29/04/2024 22:01

So what could we do about this? Writing a letter feels futile.

Morwenscapacioussleeves · 29/04/2024 22:28

Waitwhat23 · 28/04/2024 09:54

Awful and it sounds like the numbers are increasing.

From the article, this was particularly chilling -

'The list does not account for the tens of thousands of women executed in Iran on political grounds'

Tens of thousands. Fucking hell.

Yes the tens of thousands jumped of f the page for me too 😭

💐Shahnaz & all those who grieve you