National Council of Resistance of Iran - Foreign Affairs Committee EU condemns executions by Iran for deadly Ahvaz bombings - National Council of Resistance of Iran - Foreign Affairs Committee
National Council of Resistance of Iran - Foreign Affairs Committee
Monday, 22 March 2010  
border border border
border
English  English | Francais  Francais | Deutsch  Deutsch | Italiano  Italiano | العربيّة  العربيّة |
Conseil national de la R�sistance iranienne
border border
    arrow       Home

Main Menu
Home
News
Opinion
NCRI Statements
Video
About NCRI
NCRI Structure
Contact Us
Nationwide Uprising News
 IRAN LIBERATION
  LATEST ISSUES
Iran Liberation 296
Iran Liberation 295
Iran Liberation Special Issue
Iran Liberation Special Issue
Iran Liberation 293
Iran Liberation 292
border
EU condemns executions by Iran for deadly Ahvaz bombings PDF Print E-mail
Thursday, 01 February 2007

Agence France Presse - The German presidency of the EU on Thursday condemned the hanging of four men in Iran for deadly bombings in oil-rich Khuzestan province last year which the Islamic republic blamed on Britain.

"The European Union deplores the execution of four Ahvazi Arab men on January 24 sentenced to death in Iran for alleged involvement in terrorist activities in the Ahvaz region," it said in a statement.

"The EU has raised with the Iranian authorities its concerns about the conduct of the trial that led to these sentences and the defendants' lack of access to lawyers."

The 27-nation bloc called on Iran not to execute three other men accused in the case and to grant them a fair and public hearing with full transparency in all court proceedings.

"The EU reiterates its longstanding opposition to the death penalty in all circumstances," it added.

Iran's ISNA news agency reported that the executions of the four were carried out at the jail of the provincial capital of Ahvaz, in front of the victims' families.

Reports in November said a total of 10 men had been sentenced to death for the bombings in Ahvaz, which is home to a large community of ethnic minority Arabs and has been plagued by unrest since 2005.
Iranian officials had put the blame for unrest in Khuzestan on Britain and its troops based just across the border in southern Iraq, a charge denied by London.


 
 

 
go to top Go To Top go to top

© 2005-2009 by National Council of Resistance of Iran - Foreign Affairs Committee.
border
border border border