Iran plans death by stoning for adultery

London: Britain urged
Iran on Thursday to halt the execution of a woman who a rights group
says faces death by stoning for adultery.
British Foreign
Secretary William Hague commented on the case of 43-year-old Sakineh
Mohammadi-Ashtiani, saying it would”disgust and appal” the rest of the
world.
“Stoning is a medieval punishment that has no place in
the modern world and the continued use of such a punishment in Iran demonstrates in our view a
blatant disregard for human rights commitments which it has previously
entered into,” Hague told a news conference.
Turkish Foreign
Minister Ahmet Davutoglu said, “We’re trying to work and consult on all
these issues with our neighbour Iran, of course we have to see the
file.”
The case was also raised in Britain’s House of Commons,
prompting speaker John Bercow
to describe it as “a horrific, truly horrific matter”.
“We in
this house, I hope, are in favour of human rights, not of their
grotesque abuse,” he added. Human rights group Amnesty International
said last week it feared that Sakineh Mohammadi Ashtiani, who has two
children, could be “at imminent risk” of execution by stoning at any
time for adultery.
It said she was convicted in 2006 of having
had an “illicit relationship”
with two men and received 99 lashes as her sentence.
The rights
group said that, despite this, Mohammadi Ashtiani was subsequently
convicted of “adultery while being married”, which it said she denied,
and was sentenced to death by stoning. Hague called on Iran to put an
immediate stay on the execution and review the process by which
Mohammadi Ashtiani was tried. AGENCIES
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