Iranian lawyer Mohammad Mostafaei, left, answers reporters’ questions at a press conference in Oslo, Norway. Mostafaei has applied for political asylum in Norway after he was released from a detention center in Istanbul. Mostafaei fled Iran for Turkey after defending his client, Sakineh Mohammadi Ashtiani, who was convicted of cheating on her husband and sentenced to death by stoning in Iran. Tehran says it will not carry out the stoning against Ashtiani for the time being, but the mother of two could still face execution by hanging. –Photo by AP
“Independent nations do not allow other countries to interfere in their judicial affairs,” Iranian foreign ministry spokesman Ramin Mehmanparast told a news conference.
The official was responding to questions from reporters about the status of Sakineh Mohammadi-Ashtiani, a 43-year-old mother of two sentenced to death by stoning by an Iranian court.
“Western nations must not pressurise and hype it (the case) up... judicial cases have precise procedures, especially when it concerns murder.
“If a person committed a crime in Iran, that person is prosecuted which is normal, especially if she has killed somebody. The heavier the sentence, the more meticulous we are in carrying it out. This is being done,” said Mehmanparast.
Western nations and human rights groups have come out strongly against Mohammadi-Ashtiani’s stoning sentence and warned that her execution is imminent.
Iranian judiciary chief Sadeq Larijani has temporarily suspended the sentence from being carried out.
Officials in the Islamic republic maintain the woman was handed the stoning sentence for adultery and for being an accomplice in her husband’s murder.
Her lawyers and London-based rights watchdog Amnesty International say she was only sentenced for having an “illicit relationship” with two men and that the murder charge was adopted later.
Mehmanparast said the outcry from the West over her case was “irrational” and “rather a politicised approach”.
“If we are to free those who committed murders, there won’t be any security. If this is the case, we can also demand that they free all those who have committed murders and serious crimes,” he said.
When asked about Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva’s proposal to offer Mohammadi-Ashtiani asylum, he said Brazil would come to “understand it is a fuss created to undermine relations” between the two countries.
President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad echoed similar views in an interview on Iran’s English-language Press TV broadcast on Sunday.
The hardliner said Iran’s judiciary chief agreed Mohammadi-Ashtiani should not be sent to Brazil.
“I think there is no need to create some trouble for President Lula and to send her to Brazil. We are keen to export our technology to Brazil rather than such people. I think the problem will be solved” in Iran, Ahmadinejad said in comments posted on the channel’s website. —AFP
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