Women's Rights & Movements in IranIranian women 'in slavery': stoning woman's lawyer

Iranian women ‘in slavery’: stoning woman’s lawyer

-

AFP: Iranian women have been forced into slavery, the former lawyer for Sakineh Mohammadi-Ashtiani, the Iranian woman facing death by stoning, said Thursday.

BRUSSELS (AFP) — Iranian women have been forced into slavery, the former lawyer for Sakineh Mohammadi-Ashtiani, the Iranian woman facing death by stoning, said Thursday.

“In Iran unfortunately one could say women are in a real situation of slavery,” Mohammad Mostafaie, who fled Iran for Norway last July, told the European Parliament’s human rights committee.

Iran “is one of the world’s worst violators of human rights, with deaths by stoning, executions of minors aged under 18 and amputations,” he said.

Mostafaie fled Iran when Tehran issued an arrest warrant against him at the end of July.

“Women and children are tortured,” he told the committee. “When a country fails to respect the rights of its own citizens, it won’t respect the right of any other country.”

Mostafaie called for political and economic sanctions against Iran, saying its oil wealth enabled it to pay for repressive police action.

Iran this week arrested two Germans who interviewed the son of Ashtiani, public prosecutor Gholam Hossein Mohseni Ejeie told local media on Monday.

A rights group said on Monday it feared Ashtiani’s current lawyer Javid Houtan Kian had also been arrested.

Ashtiani, a 43-year-old mother of two, was sentenced to death by two different courts in the northwestern city of Tabriz in separate trials in 2006.

The first death sentence, by hanging, for her involvement in the murder of her husband, was commuted to a 10-year jail term by an appeals court in 2007.

But the second, by stoning, was on a charge of adultery levelled over several relationships, notably with the man convicted of her husband’s murder, and was upheld by another appeals court the same year.

Since July Iranian officials have said repeatedly that the stoning sentence has been stayed, in the face of an international outcry that has seen strong representations by the French and Italian governments as well as the Vatican.

But a foreign ministry spokesman told reporters on September 28 that “the judicial process has not yet finished and the final judgement will be announced after the end of the process.”

Latest news

Inflation in Iran and the Limits of What an Agreement with the United States Can Achieve

A sick political system inevitably produces a sick economy. In an absolute dictatorship where political and social freedoms are...

Day 2 of Free Iran 2026: International Figures Rally Behind NCRI Alternative

PARIS — The second day of the Free Iran 2026 World Summit brought together a broad range of former...

Free Iran 2026 Summit in Paris Draws International Support for Democratic Change in Iran

PARIS, June 20, 2026 — Political leaders, former government officials, parliamentarians, and human rights advocates from Europe and North...

Iran’s Water Crisis: Women on the Front Lines of a Silent Disaster

Iran’s water crisis is no longer merely an environmental or economic challenge; it has become one of the country’s...

Child Laborers: The Silent Victims of Poverty and Inflation in Iran

On June 15, the state-run Shargh newspaper published a report on child labor titled "Childhood on a Work Shift,"...

Iran’s Regime Executes Political Prisoners Javad Zamani and Abolfazl Saedi

Iran's regime hanged two young men, Javad Zamani and Abolfazl Saedi, in the early hours of Tuesday, June 16,...

Must read

Italy to leverage its ties with Iran

Washington Times: Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi, a close...

U.S., allies to stage naval exercise in Gulf energy shipping hub

Reuters: The United States and its allies are preparing...

You might also likeRELATED
Recommended to you