Tag Archives: nazanin afshin-jam

Nazanin Afshin-Jam verified the newspaper report about Sina Paymard

Nazanin Afshin-Jam today verified the news that Sina Paymard’s blood money was donated in Iran and Sina’s attorney, Nasrin Sotoudeh will start the paperwork on Saturday.

As for Sina’s possible freedom we have no independent verifications. According to Mohammad Mostafaei, Iranian attorney: “In the past after payment of blood money, some prisoners were freed and some have served up to 10 years.”

Thank you Canada

Nazanin Afshin-jam and SCE Campaign wish to thank Canada’s Minister of Foreign Affairs , honorable Peter McKay and the Canadian Government for their immediate response to Nazanin’s urgent request to intervene in Sina Paymard’s execution yesterday. Ottawa issued a strong statement yesterday to Iranian authorities about Sina:

http://news.gc.ca:80/web/view/en/index.jsp?articleid=341929

Canada Calls upon Iran to Overturn Death Sentence of Sina Paymard

July 17, 2007
No. 94

The Honourable Peter MacKay, Minister of Foreign Affairs and Minister of the Atlantic Canada Opportunities Agency, made an urgent appeal today to Iranian authorities to overturn the death sentence of Sina Paymard.

“Canada calls upon the Iranian government to stay the execution sentence given to Sina Paymard for a crime he was convicted of committing while a minor.

“The Government of Iran must live up to its commitments and obligations under international law as well as its own domestic law. The Islamic Republic of Iran is a party to the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and of the Convention on the Rights of the Child. Both of these international binding agreements clearly prohibit the execution of minors or people who have been convicted of crimes committed while they were minors.

“The execution of minors is a subject of the utmost concern for Canada, and we urge Iranian authorities to commute the death sentence in this case.” 

 

SCE Campaign in UK's Lifescape magazine

“Children on DEATH ROW” is the title of an article by Rajasana Otiende of UK’s Lifescape magazine where she shared her experience and involvement with the myspace campaign to save Nazanin Fatehi. 

The 4 page article of the August issue of the magazine also addresses other children facing execution in Iran . The article also features the past inteview of Nazanin Afshin-Jam with Nazanin Fatehi while she was in prison as well as a recent interview with David Etebari, the campaign coordinator of Stop Child Executions Campaign:

https://www.stopchildexecutions.com/Files/lifesacpe.pdf

 

URGENT PRESS RELEASE sent to international wires

July 17, 2007 

WITHIN TWO HOURS OF THIS PRESS RELEASE A TEENAGER IS SCHEDULED TO BE EXECUTED.

Nazanin Afshin-Jam has just received word and is desperately working to save the Child offender, Sina Paymard who will be executed by hanging in Iran within the next couple of hours

Nazanin Afshin-Jam, human rights activist with the Stop Child Executions Campaign, singer/songwriter, and former Miss Canada is trying to appeal world leaders and the international community to grant a stay of execution for this boy.

According to Nasrin Sotoudeh, Sina Paymards lawyer, he has been taken from Reja’i Shahr prison to Evin prison to be executed. His execution order has been apparently signed by Head of the Judiciary, Ayatollah Shahroudi. She said that the execution could be carried out within hours.. Sina Paymard’s family have managed to raise 70 million of the 150 million “diyeh” (blood money), which his victim’s family will not accept.

Nazanin Afshin-Jam has asked help from the Human Rights desk at the United Nations, the Foreign Affairs Minister of Canada Peter Mackay and the International Committee against Execution and is working alongside Amnesty International to see through that Iran abides by International Human Rights Law and does not carry out the execution.

Nazanin  encourages individuals to go to www.stopchildexecutions.com to learn how to immediately help Sina Paymard who is in this imminent situation, as well as helping the 71 other minors who are currently on death row in Iran.

Iran is the only country in the world that continues to officially execute minors despite being state party the International Covenent on Civil and Political Rights and the Charter of the Rights of the Child.

Here is the statement written by the European Union regarding Sina Paymard

 Statement on the death sentence of Sina Paymard
 Date: 2007-07-17
 
 The EU is deeply concerned by the news of the imminent execution of Sina
 Paymard, who was convicted and sentenced to death by a judge of the Teheran
 court for a crime perpetrated while he was a minor. The execution is
 scheduled for tonight.
 The EU appeals to the Iranian authorities not to execute Sina Paymard. The
 Islamic Republic of Iran is a party to the International Covenant on Civil
 and Political Rights and of the Convention on the Rights of the Child.
 
 Both these international binding texts clearly prohibit the execution of
 minors or people who have been convicted of crimes committed while they were
 minors. Moreover, according to the Civil Code of the Islamic Republic of
 Iran, in its article 9, the international legal texts mentioned above should
 prevail, as they are as valid as the Civil Code.
 
Nazanin
info@nazanin.ca 

VERY URGENT: SINA PAYMARD SENT TO BE EXECUTED NOW

In an urgent letter Nasrin Sotudeh, Sina Paymard’s lawyer wrote that Sina has been taken from Reja’i Shahr prison to Evin prison to be executed. His execution order has been apparently signed by Head of the Judiciary, Ayatollah Shahroudi.

She wrote that the execution could be carried out in the next 10 hours. Sina Paymard’s family have managed to raise 70 million of the 150 million diyeh, which his victim’s family will not accept.

Amnesty International is trying to contact as many EU governments as possible to get them to make urgent interventions on the case. They also are contacting the UN Special Rapporteur on EJEs asking him to urgently intervene.

SCE and Nazanin Afshin-Jam is also making all efforts to make international contacts before Sina gets executed. 

TIME IS SO SHORT 

HERE ARE SOME URGENT STEPS THAT YOU CAN TAKE :

CALL YOUR IMPORTANT CONTACTS .

CALL AYATOLLAH KHAMENEI LEADER OF ISLAMIC REGIME IN IRAN:

Phone: [00 98 21]  64411
Fax: [00 98 251] 7774 2228
Email: istiftaa@wilayah.org
Email via website: http://www.leader.ir/langs/EN/index.php?p=sendletter

CALL YOUR NATIONAL REPRESENTATIVES SUCH AS SENATORS ETC.

CONTACT MEDIA

For more information about Sina Paymard click here:

https://www.stopchildexecutions.com/Sina.aspx

http://scenews.blog.com/1786042/ 

Nazanin takes SCE campaign from US to UK

Last week Nazanin Afshin-Jam completed her Borders USA Tour in Los Angles, California. During the one month long tour across USA Nazanin addressed the child executions in Iran across USA. Nazanin and SCE campaign thank all the supporters who came to meet Nazanin in person. Your words of encouragement and support were very heart warming.
Nazanin has arrived in UK next promoting SCE campaign and performing. Here is some of her interview scheules:
Sunday July 15 
8:10 AM        Good Morning Sunday, BBC Radio 2      ( minute 22:09)
Monday July 16   
10:00 AM   Woman’s Hour, BBC Radio 4    
11:50 AM      Channel 5 News       
12:30 PM      Lunchtime Live with Kay Burley – Sky News TV   

 Tuesday 17th July

10.00 AM                   BBC Radio Leeds        

11.00                           Real Radio Yorkshire     

15.00                           BBC Radio Manchester

18.15                          BBC Radio Merseyside 

Wednesday 18th July

09.30                          Touch FM Coventry      

13.00 -                        BBC Radio WM          

14.30                          BBC Radio Shropshire 

 

 

Nazanin at the Borders in Chicago signing the Stop Child Executions flyers.

Photo: Courtesy of Iranian.com (Iranian of the day) 

 

17 year old Iranian boy sentenced to death for relationship with his girlfriend

According to a report by Association in Defence of Political Prisoners and Human Rights in Iran  A 17 year old teenager, Mosleh Zamani, has been sentenced to death . He has already served 4 years in prison.

 The judge, Brojerdi and his adviser Seyed Hassan Jafari of the Appeal Court #27 of the Supreme Court of Iran, approved the death sentence, and have already instructed the authorities in the city of Sanandaj to execute the child.

Mosleh Zamani was charged for having had sexual relationship with his girlfriend. Having served 4 years imprisonment, Mosleh was sentenced to death according to Article 105 of the Islamic criminal law.

SCE Campaign is very concerned about Mosleh’s situation as only last week a man was stoned to death for adultery. This was despite the fact that the Iranian authorities htad promised not to proceed with this barbaric sentence. It is feared that  woman is also in imminent danger of stoning. When Nazanin Afshin-Jam was informed of the initial plan to stone to death both the man and woman las month, she initiated contacts to stop the sentence however soon the Iranian officials assured the international human rights organizations does not take place. Last week after Nazanin was notified of unannounced stoning of Ja’far Kiani  in an emotional email to SCE team she wrote:

“…. Why doesn’t the world do something? Why doesn’t the UN protect these people? We need to be prudent because even when officials claim they wouldn’t carry out an execution and that they grant a stay of execution, they deny it and sometimes carry out the execution…..”

Stop Child Executions Campaign strongly objects to the unfair sentencing of Mosleh Zamani.  Please contact Iranian authorities and object to Mosleh Zamani’s sentence. 

نوجوانی ۱۷ ساله بنام مصلح زمانی پس ازتحمل چهار سال حبس درزندان سنندج محکوم به اعدام شده است.

حکم اعدام مصلح توسط شعبه ۲۷ تجدید نظردیوان عالی کشور به ریاست محمد رضا بروجردی ومستشار سید حسن جعفری تایید شده وبرای اجرا حکم به مقامات قضایی شهر سنندج اعلام گردیده است.

مصلح زمانی به اتهام ارتباط جنسی با دوست دخترش پس ازچندسال حبس کشیدن محاکمه و براساس ماده ۱۰۵ مجازات اسلامی به اعدام محکوم شده است.

برای نجات جان مصلح زمانی از اعدام تلاش کنید!

انجمن دفاع از زندانیان سیاسی وحقوق بشرایران

 ۲۰تیرماه ۱۳۸۶

 

Nazanin takes SCE Campaign to Media

While on her Border’s tour across United States, Nazanin Afshin-Jam is being interviewed in every city that she travels. Following is one of her recent interviews where she shared her views with washington Daily EXPRESS a publication of Washington Post:

 

» EXPRESS: Why did you record a version of the single “Someday” in Persian?
» NAZANIN: It was particularly important for me to reach the Iranian diaspora because I wrote the song about my family’s escape from Iran when the Revolution happened and I am sure thousands of other Iranians could relate. I want for Iranians living in Iran who have been oppressed under the current regime to know that there is hope and that “someday we will find a way.”

For that matter, I wish that all those who have experienced hardships in their life due to political persecution, or even in relationships, to know that change is possible. I have since recorded “Someday” in French and I wish I could sing it in several languages in order to reach more people with my messages of hope and freedom.

» EXPRESS: Why were your parents persecuted in Iran? Were they political?
» NAZANIN: My parents have never been political. At the start of the Revolution my father was working as the general manager of the Sheraton and was allowing for music to be played and alcohol to be served which were forbidden under the new Islamist rule. The Revolutionary Guard imprisoned him, shaved his head, tortured him and was going to execute him. Through distant contacts and luck he was temporarily released until he could have a proper trial. As soon as his wounds healed enough for him to be able to sit down in an airplane, he caught the first available flight to Spain. The rest of the family joined him soon thereafter. The following year we immigrated to Vancouver, Canada, which has been my home since.

» EXPRESS: What do you remember of living in Iran and the tribulations your family faced?
» NAZANIN: I was only a year old when we fled Iran so I do not have any direct memories, only pictures, stories, and reminders like the scars on my fathers back from the lashes and the tears in my mothers eyes when she listens to traditional Persian songs and remembers the past.

» EXPRESS: Have you visited Iran since you left?
» NAZANIN: Ironically, I have traveled the world yet I have not been able to visit the country of my birth. Being so outspoken on women’s rights in that region and being frank about the human rights abuses under the current regime, it is too dangerous for me to go back. My Web sites [nazanin.ca, stopchildexecutions.com] have been banned in Iran and I have received rather threatening emails. But I am quite hopeful that in my lifetime, I will be able to return, and visit the land where the very first charter on human rights was drafted under Cyrus the Great.

» EXPRESS: Do you think your beauty queen background is a help — because it opens doors — or a hindrance — because pretty women often aren’t taken seriously by piggy men — in your political and social works?
» NAZANIN: I entered the Miss World competition in order to gain a platform to speak on global issues close to my heart and it certainly helped me gain a stronger voice on the International scene. Those that are not aware that the motto of Miss World is “beauty with a purpose,” and that their aim is to raise money for children’s charities around the world, tend to think of stereotypes they have seen in movies. Once these same people hear my words and feel my passion to serve humanity on some level, they are the first to apologize for their ignorance. Having the “miss” title has helped me mobilize different groups and individuals from across the map and garner media attention on pertinent issues that need to be exposed.

» EXPRESS: We hear about honor killings and the general oppression of women in some Islamic countries. But what led you to focus on stopping the execution of children in Iran?
» NAZANIN: I am against all barbaric acts of violence against women and whenever there is an opportunity I speak out, like the recent case of a teenage girl named Du’a who was kicked, beaten and stoned to death by several men, including family members in the Kurdish area of Northern Iraq, for allegedly having “relations” with a Sunni boy. I spoke at Rutgers University and the Institute of Public Affairs of Montreal about the discriminatory laws of Sharia and how in Iran women are legally considered half the worth of a man. Women cannot travel without permission from their husbands or fathers; they do not have the same rights to inheritance or custody rights of their children in divorce cases.

Recently I addressed the issue of “forced hijab” on CNN and Fox News where I discussed the recent crackdown and brutal attacks on Iranian women who are not properly veiling themselves. At the conference on “Traditional Harmful Practices” at the European Union we covered the issue of stonings that are taking place for “crimes” of adultery. And at my recent address before the Subcommittee on Human Rights at the Canadian Parliament I gave and overall account of the persecution faced by political prisons, religious and ethnic minorities and the severe human rights abuses that take place on a daily level.

I have concentrated much of my attention on children’s rights in Iran. Last year I initiated a campaign to save the life of a 17-year-old girl on death row named Nazanin Fatehi. She was in a park with her 15-year-old niece when three men attempted to rape them. Out of self-defense she stabbed one of her attackers who later died in hospital. She was charged with murder and was sentenced to death by hanging.

Through an on-line petition and the help of the media I was able to collect 350,000 signatures on a petition. With the weight of the petition, along with Mina Ahadi, I was then able to lobby international bodies like the Canadian Parliament, the EU, the UN, gain support from various human rights groups around the world and secure great lawyers for Fatehi. With all this pressure from the International community we were able to enact pressure on the Iranian Judiciary to grant a stay of execution and order a new trial for Fatehi. In January 2007, she was exonerated from all murder charges and was released from prison.

With the success of this campaign we learned of 70-plus other minors on death row which lead to the larger Stop Child Executions Campaign.

Since Iran has signed the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and the Charter of the Rights of the Child they are obliged not to execute anyone who has committed an offense before the age of 18 and yet they continue to do so. Someone needs to be a voice for these children. If we are successful in this next campaign we will be able to inspire more people that a difference can be made and we can focus on even larger issues.

» EXPRESS: Do you fear any reprisals for taking on the Iranian authorities? Even something as extreme as a fatwa?
» NAZANIN: The fear is there, however I cannot allow it to distract me and my mission. If these fundamentalists are able to silence me from across the ocean, what hope do the people have from within? The women living in Iran are so courageous and strong that despite the threat of torture and execution they still rise and demand their rights. The least I can do living in a country that embraces freedom of expression, is to voice the concerns of those that do not have one.

» EXPRESS: Do you think much will change in Iran with the current leadership and Sharia law fully in place? Or will it take another revolution — a “progressive revolution,” as you say in “Someday” — and a huge cultural shift for women to get their civil rights?
» NAZANIN: I think that with the current regime in power, change will be difficult to achieve, but I truly believe that it is not only possible but also probable. I think it is only a matter of time.

I say this because the public will is there. Seventy percent of the population is below the age of 30 and the youth want nothing more than freedom, democracy, separation of religion and the state, the rule of law and human rights. There are about 70,000 Persian blogs — which is the second highest after English — which shows how thirsty they are to connect with the west and have their stories heard. They want to be seen as separate from those that are in power who do not represent their opinions and desires. In other words, the people of Iran do not need to be “convinced” that change is required.

That said, the Iranian people will need support from the International community through track II diplomacy. NGOs from the outside need to link with NGO’s from within the country with special attention on the women’s rights groups, the youth movement and labor unions. These are the powerhouses of the nation, and with enough support and media announcements that can be fed in the country via satellite I believe there is huge potential for change toward a new democratic Iran. Freedom of the Iranian people and inevitably more stability in the Middle East region is all possible without the fatal mistake of the Bush administration to allow for military intervention on Iran. 

Which Islam? Asks Reza Alijenad's mother

In a phone conversation Reza Alinejad’s mother told Nazanin Afshin-Jam that she had visited her son in the prison and Reza seem to be keeping himself busy with making handicrafts such as woodworks, and tablecloths while in prison. His file is still awaiting review by head of Iranian Judiciaty Ayatollah Shahrudi.

Reza’s mother was very concerned about the plight of his son and Nazanin : ” I don’t know of any part of Islam that promotes execution of children and injustice”.  Reza’s mother thanked Nazanin and everyone who is fighting for her son’s rights.