Iran stoning case lawyer heading to next week’s Geneva rights summit
Source: Geneva Summit for Human Rights and Democracy
Date: 9 March 2011
GENEVA - The Iranian lawyer of Sakineh Mohammadi Ashtiani, the 43 year old mother of two who was sentenced to death by
stoning on charges of adultery, will join other prominent human rights defenders at the third annual Geneva Summit for
Human Rights and Democracy, on March 15, 2011. Mohammad Mostafaei is credited with saving the lives of over 50 clients.
Organized by an international coalition of 20 NGOs, including UN Watch, Freedom House and Ibuka, the Geneva Summit will
provide a voice for the voiceless and advocate action on urgent human rights situations. The conference will feature
victim testimonies from renowned human rights defenders, dissidents and experts, and produce draft resolutions for the
UN Human Rights Council to adopt. For more on the conference, speakers and program, click here.
Human rights groups say Iran imposes harsh sentences, including in some cases the execution of minors, homosexuals,
political dissidents and protesters, and women accused of sexual misconduct.
Mostafaei a leading Iranian human rights lawyer, specializing in the defense of those facing the death penalty,
specifically juveniles. He played a vital role in exposing Iran’s draconian judicial system to the world. As a result,
he was harassed for years by the Iranian government and arrested several times. His brave work for Sakineh forced him
eventually to flee Iran.
After Mostafaei launched a campaign to bring international attention to Sakineh’s case, resulting in a global outcry
against her sentence, Iranian authorities issued a warrant for his arrest on charges of conspiring against state
security. Fearing for his safety, Mostafaei fled to Turkey, prompting Iranian security forces to arrest his wife and
brother-in-law, holding them as hostages to force his return. Under intense international pressure, they were released.
Mostafaei has since been granted asylum along with his wife and daughter in Norway.
“The rulers of the Islamic Republic of Iran are the worst human rights offenders,” said Mr. Mostafei. Stoning to death,
mass and political executions and amputations, even of juveniles, are taking place in Iran, he said, adding that human
rights defenders, political activists, professors, lawyers and everyone who is against the government's policies could
be arbitrarily arrested.
Mostafaei continues his human rights work from exile. At the Geneva Summit he will offer his perspective on the failings
of Iran’s legal system and the need for fundamental reforms to protect human rights.
Also at the summit:
•Guang-il Jung, a North Korean dissident who was tortured and escaped from a labor camp
•Farid Tukhbatullin, a Turkmen human rights activist and former prisoner under death threat from his government
•Luis Enrique Ferrer Garcia, a Cuban dissident who received a 28-year sentence for his work with the Varela project, a
civic initiative calling for democratic reforms in Cuba.
•Mostafaei’s testimony will be especially timely in light of the U.S.-led initiative during the current session of the
UN Human Rights Council to introduce a resolution establishing an investigator on Iranian abuses.
ENDS