NCRI

Brave Iranian mother cries out against Italian PM’s silence on executions

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NCRI – The mother of Reyhaneh Jabbari, a young Iranian woman whose execution in October 2014 triggered international condemnation of the mullahs’ regime, has written an open letter to the Prime Minister of Italy Matteo Renzi criticizing his trip this week to Tehran and his silence on the appalling human rights abuses taking place in Iran.

Reyhaneh Jabbari was executed for killing an intelligence agent of the Iranian regime in self-defense.

The following is the text of the impassioned open letter by her mother Mrs. Shole Pakravan to the Prime Minister of Italy on the eve of his trip to Tehran:

“The Prime Minister of Italy will travel to Iran tomorrow. He might aim to convey the messages of those who are shocked and disappointed about Iran’s executions. He might intend to communicate the Pope’s message – which addresses the global abolition of the death penalty – or to say: “Stop Public Executions!” He might request a halt to the execution of juvenile offenders.

Or perhaps he might not say much about executions, but surely he would mention the brutal sentences of amputation of limbs. No? They might not even discuss such issues because their meeting would then be afflicted by such bitter and creepy facts. But I am quite sure that he would mention the expulsion of religious and ethnic minorities from universities or administrations. He would talk about releasing those imprisoned people, such as Hossein Kazemeyni Boroujerdi and Mohammad Ali Taheri, whose opinions differ from the current administration. Then again, he might not talk about these things at all. Well then, what is his aim of coming to Iran? Instead of visiting the historical monuments of Shiraz and Isfahan, he might intend to visit prisons to ask about the condition of Narges Mohammadi in order to see how she feels about being far from her two small children. Perhaps he wants to visit Hossein Ronaghi in order to see how he went on hunger strike although he suffers from kidney failure. He might want to see the exotic painting talents of Atena Farghadani who has unjustly been sentenced to serve 12 years in prison. Also, he might state that torture is not a decent act. No matter what title or name each human holds, beatings or hangings or any other acts of torture are prohibited against all human beings. But I doubt he will visit prisoners. He might cruise through Tehran’s streets and witness the young and homeless children who beg for money with bare feet. No, then again his car’s windshield has tinted glass and he cannot witness such scenes or he cannot talk about them in his meetings.

Honestly I have no idea why he is traveling to Iran. He might be seeking money, trade, oil, sanctions and things like that.

In other words, can anything else be important to him except the mentioned cases? I have no clue. Maybe this Prime Minister is a good person and he might address all of the above issues. In this case, what he will be remembered for in the future is his well-earned reputation and his good deeds. But if he only pursues his own commercial interests in Iran, then he must note that in Iran there are still a high number of executions per capita and it is still common for people to be tortured to extract ‘confessions,’ let alone all the other issues.

It does no harm for him to note that Italian artists and the Pope shared their dismay for Reyhaneh’s execution and they called for abolition of such sentences. Despite all of the global and domestic demands, my loving daughter was executed. I am now inspired by the Italian artist, Gianni Rodari, who wished for the existence of a kiosk to sell prospect to people. Although I buried my whole hope and desire, I still go to that kiosk to buy a little bit of hope. No, I will buy all of that because I want to be hopeful that the Prime Minister’s visit to Iran becomes fruitful and beneficent for us, as the helpless nation. I want to be hopeful that the Prime Minister of Italy does not seek to plunder the God-given wealth of a people at the cost of remaining silent against an infectious phenomenon called execution.

Perhaps the prime minister accepts our invitation and stands by our side in the petition for abolition of the death penalty. Perhaps he also wishes for an Iran without any execution. Maybe in his meetings, he would say: No to Execution, No to Torture!”

When she was just 19 years old, Ms. Reyhaneh Jabbari was working as a decorator when she was forced to defend herself against an intelligence agent who tried to rape her. She was jailed for seven years and was executed on October 25, 2014 despite an international campaign to save her.

Iranian opposition leader Maryam Rajavi said at the time that Ms. Jabbari’s execution had political motives and that it was unlawful even in the framework of the mullahs’ medieval laws. Mrs. Rajavi called for an independent international probe into the execution of Reyhaneh Jabbari as an example of arbitrary, extrajudicial and criminal death sentences in Iran that have taken on added dimensions since Hassan Rouhani’s tenure as the regime’s President.

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