Rights group says Iranian woman's TV interview was coerced
By the CNN Wire Staff August 13, 2010 -- Updated 1021 GMT (1821 HKT)
Tehran, Iran (CNN) -- An international human rights organization accused Iranian authorities Thursday of coercing a 43-year-old woman sentenced to death by stoning to give an interview on state-run TV a day earlier.
In the interview, the woman, Sakineh Mohammadi Ashtiani, denounced her lawyer and said she knew about a plot to kill her husband but felt she had been misled. The mother of two faces a death sentence for adultery.
The Amnesty International human rights group criticized the Wednesday interview with Ashtiani.
"Televised 'confessions' have repeatedly been used by the authorities to incriminate individuals in custody," Amnesty International said. "Many have later retracted these 'confessions,' stating that they were coerced to make them, sometimes under torture or other ill-treatment.
"This so-called confession forms part of a growing catalogue of other forced confessions and self-incriminating statements made by many detainees in the past year."
The condemned woman's lawyer, Mohammad Mostafaei, said his client made those comments to state-run television "to save her life" and noted that the death sentence for murder charges related to her husband's death had been commuted.
"The channel that we have in Iran is completely under the control of the intelligence ministry," Mostafaei told CNN on Thursday. "The goal of this channel is character assassination. And the other goal it has, through the production of documentaries full of lies and people's confessions, is to justify the government's illegal actions. This is the case for Sakineh Mohammadi as well. Because right now Sakineh Mohammadi's life is in the hands of powerful people inside Iran."
Also Thursday, Ashtiani's son released a letter to the United Nations calling for an investigation of his mother's case. "Whatever our mother says now is not acceptable because she is incarcerated and faces the nightmare of stoning or execution day and night," Sajjad Ghaderzadeh wrote, though he didn't refer directly to the broadcast.
Mostafaei told CNN last month that his client confessed to the crime after being subjected to 99 lashes. He said she later recanted the confession and denied any wrongdoing.
In Wednesday's interview, aired on the program "20:30," Ashtiani blamed Mostafaei for publicizing her case and said she had never met him.
"I tell Mostafaei: How dare you use my name, lie in my name, say things about me that are not true," she said in a statement that was voiced over by another woman. Ashtiani's voice carries a thick Azeri accent that some Iranians may have difficulty understanding.
She added she had not wanted her family to know she was in jail.
Ashtiani acknowledged having known about the plot to kill her husband but said she had not taken it seriously at the time.
"The man entered my life and fooled me with his words and said let's kill my husband," she said. "He fooled me and said I'll do this for you, what a bad husband, I'll take care of you. He was my husband's cousin, and he said things about my husband.
"Then I realized, when I went to prison, he had a criminal record and that this was his third criminal record, and when he said we should kill my husband, I couldn't even believe him or that my husband would die, I thought he was joking, that he had lost his mind.
"When my husband's mother was at our house one day and I went to get her medicine, I saw him there with all the tools he had bought, including electrical tools, wires and gloves. Then he killed my husband by connecting him to electricity with the electrical wires. He had told me beforehand to send my kids to their grandmother's house."
The prosecutor of East Azerbaijan Province, Malek Ajdar Sharifi, then says, "The deceased was given an injection to fall asleep by his wife, then the man arrived and put him into the bath and put two electrical lines on his body and killed the deceased."
The anchor then speculated that the Western news media, including CNN, have focused on the case to help secure the release of three American hikers seized by Iranian forces along the Iraqi border more than a year ago.
Iran says the three Americans -- Sarah Shourd, Shane Bauer, and Josh Fattal -- strayed across an unmarked border while hiking in Iraq's Kurdistan region.
Ashtiani's lawyer dismissed the program as a tool of the government.
"'20:30' is a program that is controlled by the intelligence services in Iran," Mostafaei told CNN in an interview in Oslo, Norway, where he has been granted asylum after fleeing Iran.
He had gone into hiding July 24, after enduring a lengthy interrogation at Iran's notorious Evin prison, the same day rallies were being held worldwide to draw attention to the Ashtiani case. He then slipped out of the country when his wife and brother-in-law were arrested. They have both since been released.
"Even IRIB [Iranian state television], they don't have any control of this program," Mostafaei said. "And the point of having this program is the character assassination of people. In this program, many reports are not real."
Mostafaei noted that his client is in prison, where she is facing a death sentence.
"It's natural that she will do whatever the authorities tell her to save her own life," he said. "They are putting a lot of pressure on her to be on television. Otherwise it wouldn't be so crucial to carry out such an act. The lawyer of a person who is facing the death penalty is the person who knows the most information about the case. He is the defending attorney. The lawyer can comment on the case, not the defendant."
He said Ashtiani's death sentence for killing her husband had been commuted because the victim's family forgave her.
"What is important is the sentence to stone this innocent woman to death" for adultery, he said. "She should not be stoned to death. And this is what the international community is demanding as well. This is the main subject that the Iranian state TV broadcast and the judiciary system did not address."
He disputed the assertion that they had never met. "I met her last year in Tabriz Prison," he said. "I am her legal counsel. And my goal as her attorney is to help her survive."
Another of Ashtiani's lawyers, Hootan Kian, concurred. "She was forced to say these things on television, 100 percent forced," he told CNN from Tabriz.
Norway's foreign minister, Jonas Gahr Store, told CNN on Thursday that his nation felt compelled to offer asylum to Mostafaei.
"In this case, where there is a courageous man who raises cases, difficult cases which the authorities don't like, and he sees himself in a position where he has to flee across a mountain. He sees his wife imprisoned. Well, I think we should wake up and speak out," the foreign minister said.
Brazil has offered to give asylum to Ashtiani, but Iran has rejected the proposal.
In an interview with the state-owned Agencia Brasil news outlet, Iranian Ambassador Mohsen Shaterzadeh said Brazil had not made a formal offer to the Iranian government for asylum.
"We did not receive in any official way the request or offer for Ashtiani to be sent to Brazil," the ambassador is quoted as saying. "There was no written note, oral note or exchange of notes."
He added that the matter involves only Iran, and no other countries can be involved in the process.
Agencia Brasil said Brazil's foreign minister, Celso Amorim, had reiterated on Wednesday the government's offer to have Ashtiani sent to the South American nation.
Ashtiani's son, 22, read his Thursday letter to the U.N. over the phone to a representative with the International Committee Against Stoning, who sent it to CNN.
"The case of our father's murder was previously taken care of and an individual confessed to his murder and that case is now closed," he said. "How come is it that now the state media has decided to re-open the case and declare that our mother is a murderer?
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