NCRI

IRAN: Justice Minister reiterates prudent use of death penalty

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NCRI – Reacting to some comments on abolishing death penalty for drug traffickers in Iran, the Iranian regime’s Justice Minister and a member of the Death Committee responsible for the 1988 massacre of tens of thousands of political prisoners in Iran, has said: “One of the punishments for a corrupt person is execution.”

In an interview with the state news agency IRNA on Friday September 30, Mostafa Pour-Mohammadi stated that he doesn’t believe that the death penalty can be ruled out and added: “There are cases in which someone is a source of corruption and his existence will bring about nothing but corruption.”

To justify the rising number of executions and widespread oppression in Iran by the clerical regime, Pour-Mohammadi pointed out: “the type of punishment in any situation should be proportionate to its effect. Scholars, jurists, experts, psychologists and criminologists should join hands to determine what kind of punishment will be the most effective.”

For his part, Sadeq Larijani, the Chief Justice of the Iranian regime, emphasized on Friday that it is not the Judiciary’s policy to eliminate executions for drug smugglers. He said, “When did we have such an inclination? … This claim that executions were not useful is irrelevant. I urge all prosecutors across the country not to delay the implementation of the verdicts, and carry them out once they are issued. We are not allowed to delay carrying out the verdicts for three years and let the criminals begin praying in prison and then argue that since they pray we should cancel their executions. We cannot do away with executions in general because it undermines the judiciary’s deterrence.”

The regime’s chief justice admitted that executions are a means for establishing security in society. Larijani stressed, “One of the reasons for the effectiveness of these punishments is their prompt, expeditious and decisive implementation. It is against the interests of society and the Judiciary to prolong the prosecution process.” He criticized “giving opportunity during the prosecution” to those accused of drug smuggling and said, “The prosecutor offices must establish security on all levels and take this task seriously.”

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