EuropeSouth AsiaAsia PacificAmericasMiddle EastAfricaBBC HomepageWorld ServiceEducation



Front Page

World

UK

UK Politics

Business

Sci/Tech

Health

Education

Sport

Entertainment

Talking Point

In Depth

On Air

Archive
Feedback
Low Graphics
Help

Sunday, September 12, 1999 Published at 21:30 GMT 22:30 UK


World: Middle East

Iran death sentences

Hundreds were arrested after the street violence

An Iranian court has sentenced four people to death in connection with the street violence which shook the country in July.

In an interview with the hardline newspaper Jomhuri Eslami, the head of the Tehran Revolutionary Court, Gholamhossein Rahbarpour, said two of the sentences had been confirmed by the Supreme Court.

Iran crisis
The week-long unrest - the worst in Iran since the aftermath of the 1979 Islamic revolution - was sparked when police and armed right-wing Islamic vigilantes attacked a peaceful student demonstration against the banning of a reformist newspaper.

The riots left three people dead according to official figures, while students and moderate newspapers said at least five people were killed and dozens injured.


Middle East correspondent Jim Muir reports
Hardline leaders, who are engaged in a power struggle with the moderates allied with President Mohammad Khatami, ordered hundreds of arrests and officials said those found responsible would be dealt with harshly.

Others 'under investigation'

Judge Rahbarpour said the four people, whom he did not name, had organised links with certain political groupings, which is why the verdict concerning them had not been announced immediately.

He also held out the possibility of further death sentences among the 1,000 arrested during the protests.

"There are other dossiers with heavy punishments under investigation," he said.

The judge said about 1,000 suspects had been handed over to the special court - originally created to punish collaborators with the pre-revolutionary regime.

Of these, 20 had been cleared of any wrongdoing, and investigations were continuing against the others.

The judge did not specify the charges but he suggested the harshest sentences were aimed at those blamed for inciting the riots.

"The people who laid the grounds ... for the riots ... are definitely criminals," he said.

Israel spying case

Speaking about another controversial case involving 13 Iranian Jews arrested on charges of spying for Israel, Judge Rahbarpur said that the courts had evidence that proved their guilt.

The judge said that as the crimes had been committed in the southern province of Fars, the files had been handed to the court in Shiraz.

If convicted, the defendants face a near certain death sentence under a 1996 law which calls for capital punishment for those found guilty of spying for Israel or the United States.

Our correspondent says Iran's Jewish community fears that the case will become so highly politicised that a fair trail may be impossible.



Advanced options | Search tips




Back to top | BBC News Home | BBC Homepage |




Africa | Americas | Asia-Pacific | Europe | Middle East | South Asia



Relevant Stories

05 Sep 99�|�Middle East
Iranian judges ban reformist paper

15 Jul 99�|�Middle East
Iran hunts protest leaders

15 Jul 99�|�Middle East
Picture gallery: Hardline protest

14 Jul 99�|�Middle East
Analysis: Khatami at the crossroads





Internet Links


President of Iran

Iran News

Iranian News Agency


The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.




In this section

Safety chief deplores crash speculation

Iraq oil-for-food aid extended

Israel demands soccer sex scandal inquiry

Israeli PM's plane in accident

Jordan police stop trades unionists prayers

New Israeli raid in southern Lebanon

New demand over PLO terror list

Earthquake hits Iran

New UN decision on Iraq approved

Algerian president pledges reform





Trending Now