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Iran stoning: Sakineh Mohammadi Ashtiani on TV

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Tue, 16 Nov 2010 9:15a.m.

The stoning sentence against the 43-year-old Sakineh Mohammadi Ashtiani (pictured) has been put on hold and is now being reviewed by Iran's supreme court (Reuters)

The stoning sentence against the 43-year-old Sakineh Mohammadi Ashtiani (pictured) has been put on hold and is now being reviewed by Iran's supreme court (Reuters)

Iranian state television has broadcast a purported statement by an Iranian woman sentenced to death by stoning for adultery in which she calls herself a "sinner".

The stoning sentence against the 43-year-old Sakineh Mohammadi Ashtiani has been put on hold and is now being reviewed by Iran's supreme court. The case has raised an international outcry, embarrassing Tehran.

A woman identified as Ashtiani said in the state TV report shown overnight: "I am a sinner." The woman's face was blurred and her words were voiced over in what the TV report said was a translation into Farsi from Azeri Turkish, which is spoken in parts of Iran.

The report also broadcast purported statements by two men identified as Ashtiani's son, Sajjad Qaderzadeh, and her lawyer, Houtan Kian, both of whom were arrested last month. It also aired remarks allegedly made by two Germans who were arrested purportedly while trying to interview Ashtiani's family in October.

Ashtiani was convicted in 2006 of having an "illicit relationship" with two men after the murder of her husband the year before and was sentenced at that time to 99 lashes. Later that year, she was also convicted of adultery and sentenced to be stoned, even though she retracted a confession that she says was made under duress.

Her family and lawyer have said in the past that Ashtiani was tortured while in custody.

In the state TV report, Qaderzadeh said he lied about his mother being tortured, and blamed the family's lawyer, Kian, for the attention surrounding the case.

"He (Kian) told me to say she (Ashtiani) was tortured," Qaderzadeh said. "Unfortunately, I listened to him and said lies to the foreign media."

The faces of all the three Iranian's were blurred in the report, while the Germans' faces were shown clearly.

AP

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Comments

16 Nov 2010 04:58p.m.

Pete wrote:

Has the UN no power, no concern, no purpose?

16 Nov 2010 03:43p.m.

Kevin Ward wrote:

If ever there was an example of the need for the separation of church and state, this is it. E pluribus unum doesnt do to bad in my book as an a appropriate motto.

16 Nov 2010 11:58a.m.

Ruz wrote:

Of course the irony is that Iran today is worse than it was under the deposed Shah of Iran. What they need is a new revolution to depose the revolutionaries.

16 Nov 2010 10:57a.m.

bee wrote:

Creating fake TV confessions and or taking confessions under severe torture of the prisoner or her/his family is the Iranian government's specialty. That Islamic dictatorship is a backward inhumane dictatorship and if Iranians did not fear for their lives, the dictatorship would have been long gone.