Iran: Iran executes 2 in rare blasphemy case – Times of India

Dubai: Iran Two people convicted of were hanged on Monday BlasphemyIt was a rare death penalty for the crime, officials said, as executions increased in the Islamic republic after months of unrest.
Iran remains one of the world’s top executioners, having executed at least 203 prisoners since the beginning of this year alone, according to the Oslo-based group Iran Human Rights. But executions for blasphemy are rare, as in previous cases the authorities had reduced the sentence.
killed two people, Yusuf Mehrad and Sadrullah Fazli Zare, died in Arak prison in central Iran. He was arrested in May 2020, accused of being involved in a channel called “Criticism of Superstition and Religion” on the Telegram messaging app. US Commission on International Religious Freedom, The commission noted that both men faced months of solitary confinement and could not contact their families.
Iran’s judiciary’s Mizan news agency confirmed the executions, describing the two men as having insulted Islam’s prophet Muhammad and promoting atheism.
Mizan also accused them of burning the Quran, the holy book of Islam, although it was not clear whether the men allegedly did so or whether such pictures were shared in the Telegram channel.
Mahmoud Amiri-Moghaddam, who heads Iran for Human Rights, condemned the executions as highlighting the “medieval nature” of Iran’s democracy.
“The international community must show by its response that the death penalty for expressing an opinion is intolerable,” he said in a statement. “The international community’s refusal to react decisively is a green light for Iranian government and his like-minded people around the world.
It was not immediately clear when Iran conducted its last execution for blasphemy. Other countries in the Middle East, such as Saudi Arabia, also allow the death penalty for blasphemy.
The streak of executions, including of members of ethnic minority groups, in Iran comes as months of protests over the death in September of 22-year-old Mahsa Amini following her arrest by the country’s morality police.
At least four people charged with crimes alleged from the demonstrations have already been sentenced to death. The protests, which have reportedly left more than 500 people dead and 19,000 others arrested, are one of the biggest challenges to Iran’s theocracy since the 1979 Islamic Revolution.
In 2022, Iran will execute at least 582 people, compared to 333 people in 2021, according to Iran Human Rights. Amnesty International’s most recent report on capital punishment ranks Iran as the world’s second largest executioner, behind only China, where thousands of people are believed to be executed a year.