Tehran (AFP) - Iran hanged
Saturday a woman convicted of murdering a former intelligence officer
she claimed had tried to sexually assault her, defying international
appeals for a stay of execution.
Reyhaneh
Jabbari, 26, who had been on death row for five years, was put to death
at dawn, the official IRNA news agency quoted the Tehran prosecutor's
office as saying.
Amnesty
International condemned her killing, describing it as "a bloody stain on
Iran's human rights record" and "an affront to justice".
A
message posted on the homepage of a Facebook campaign set up to try to
save Jabbari noted the "sad news" of her death, adding the words "Rest
in Peace" alongside pictures of her as a young child.
Jabbari, an interior designer, was executed for the 2007 stabbing of Morteza Abdolali Sarbandi.
Iranian actors and other prominent figures had campaigned for clemency on her behalf, echoing similar calls in the West.
Iran's judiciary had given
several deadlines for Sarbandi's family to spare Jabbari under an
Islamic sharia law provision that allows a death sentence for murder to
be commuted to jail time with the agreement of the victim's family.
But
relatives of Sarbandi, a 47-year-old surgeon who earlier worked for the
intelligence ministry, refused the pleas to spare Jabbari's life,
demanding, according to Iranian media, that she tell "the truth."
A
UN human rights monitor said the killing came in self-defence after
Sarbandi tried to sexually abuse Jabbari, and that the condemned woman's
trial in 2009 had been deeply flawed.
But
a medical report, prepared for the judiciary and quoted by IRNA in its
Saturday dispatch, said Sarbandi was stabbed in the back and that the
killing had been premeditated.
Efforts
for a commuted jail sentence had intensified in recent weeks but
Sarbandi's family and Jabbari remained at loggerheads over the
circumstances of the killing.
He
told two of Iran's reformist daily newspapers, Shargh and Etemad, in
April that his family "would not even contemplate mercy until truth is
unearthed," about her alleged accomplice.
Jabbari's
mother was allowed to visit her for one hour on Friday, Amnesty said, a
custom that tends to precede executions in Iran.
The
global human rights monitor's deputy director for the Middle East and
North Africa, Hassiba Hadj Sahraoui, said news of Jabbari's death was
"disappointing in the extreme".
"Tragically,
this case is far from uncommon. Once again Iran has insisted on
applying the death penalty despite serious concerns over the fairness of
the trial," she added.
According to the United Nations, more than 250 people have been executed in Iran since the beginning of 2014.
The
UN and international human rights groups have said that Jabbari's
confession was obtained under intense pressure and threats from Iranian
prosecutors, and that she should have had a retrial.
Ahmed
Shaheed, the UN's human rights rapporteur on Iran, said in April that
Sarbandi had offered to hire Jabbari to redesign his office and took her
to an apartment where he sexually assaulted her.
However, Sarbandi's family dismissed her account and said Jabbari had confessed to buying a knife two days before the killing.
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