Advocates hope Iranian girl will avoid execution
Updated Wed. Jan. 10 2007 6:14 PM ET
CTV.ca News Staff
The trial of an Iranian girl convicted of killing a man who attempted to rape her concluded Wednesday, according to a former Miss World Canada who has advocated on her behalf.
Nazanin Fatehi, 19, has had her case championed by former beauty pageant contestant Nazanin Afshin-Jam.
The four judges overseeing the case have agreed that the killing was not premeditated, so Afshin-Jam said she is hopeful Fatehi will avoid the death penalty and may even be released from custody.
"At this point, they might still give her a prison sentence or they might release her completely," Afshin-Jam told CTV Newsnet.
"We're not expecting anything because at this stage it would be foolish to assume anything, but based on the people who were in the courtroom today, they seemed pretty happy and said that Nazanin was smiling."
According to Afshin-Jam's website for Fatehi (HelpNazanin.com), more than 200 people came to support the young woman in court. In other similar cases, there are usually about 12.
Fatehi was sentenced to death in an Iranian court a year ago, after admitting to stabbing to death one of three men who tried to rape her and a 16-year-old relative. Fatehi was 17 at the time.
In June, her death sentence was stayed and a new trial ordered.
According to the Iranian daily newspaper Etemaad, Fatehi and her niece were in a park outside Tehran with their boyfriends when they were approached by three men. The boys fled after the men pushed the girls to the ground. Fatehi drew a knife and stabbed one man in the arm and another in the chest, killing him.
"I say to myself, if I was still in Iran that could have been me," said Afshin-Jam.
Under Iran's strict laws on chastity, if Fatehi had allowed the men to rape her and her niece, the girls would have been subjected to 100 lashes.
If they had been married at the time they were raped they would likely have been found guilty of adultery and sentenced to death by stoning.
Self-defence is a valid defence for murder in Iran, but it depends largely on the circumstances. For example, the fact that Fatehi and her niece were in a park in the evening could have affected her defence.
"Under Shariah law, the life of a woman is worth half that of a man and therefore her testimony as well in court," explained Afshin-Jam on Tuesday.
Afshin-Jam, who won the Miss Canada pageant in 2003 and was born in Iran, took up the cause last year.
She has since become the figurehead of what is now an international campaign to have Fatehi freed. The European Union has denounced the death sentence and Amnesty International is lobbying for Nazanin's release.
Updated Wed. Jan. 10 2007 6:14 PM ET
CTV.ca News Staff
The trial of an Iranian girl convicted of killing a man who attempted to rape her concluded Wednesday, according to a former Miss World Canada who has advocated on her behalf.
Nazanin Fatehi, 19, has had her case championed by former beauty pageant contestant Nazanin Afshin-Jam.
The four judges overseeing the case have agreed that the killing was not premeditated, so Afshin-Jam said she is hopeful Fatehi will avoid the death penalty and may even be released from custody.
"At this point, they might still give her a prison sentence or they might release her completely," Afshin-Jam told CTV Newsnet.
"We're not expecting anything because at this stage it would be foolish to assume anything, but based on the people who were in the courtroom today, they seemed pretty happy and said that Nazanin was smiling."
According to Afshin-Jam's website for Fatehi (HelpNazanin.com), more than 200 people came to support the young woman in court. In other similar cases, there are usually about 12.
Fatehi was sentenced to death in an Iranian court a year ago, after admitting to stabbing to death one of three men who tried to rape her and a 16-year-old relative. Fatehi was 17 at the time.
In June, her death sentence was stayed and a new trial ordered.
According to the Iranian daily newspaper Etemaad, Fatehi and her niece were in a park outside Tehran with their boyfriends when they were approached by three men. The boys fled after the men pushed the girls to the ground. Fatehi drew a knife and stabbed one man in the arm and another in the chest, killing him.
"I say to myself, if I was still in Iran that could have been me," said Afshin-Jam.
Under Iran's strict laws on chastity, if Fatehi had allowed the men to rape her and her niece, the girls would have been subjected to 100 lashes.
If they had been married at the time they were raped they would likely have been found guilty of adultery and sentenced to death by stoning.
Self-defence is a valid defence for murder in Iran, but it depends largely on the circumstances. For example, the fact that Fatehi and her niece were in a park in the evening could have affected her defence.
"Under Shariah law, the life of a woman is worth half that of a man and therefore her testimony as well in court," explained Afshin-Jam on Tuesday.
Afshin-Jam, who won the Miss Canada pageant in 2003 and was born in Iran, took up the cause last year.
She has since become the figurehead of what is now an international campaign to have Fatehi freed. The European Union has denounced the death sentence and Amnesty International is lobbying for Nazanin's release.