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Iran's top judge denies executions for being gay

Iran's top judge denies executions for being gay

Sadeq Ardeshir Amoli Larijani (Photo courtesy of Dadiran.ir)
Sadeq Ardeshir Amoli Larijani, the head of Iran’s judiciary. (Photo courtesy of Dadiran.ir)
The head of Iran’s judiciary, Sadeq Amoli Larijani, has disputed the accuracy of frequent reports that Iran executes people for being gay.
That accusation by Western human rights activists “is no more than a lie,” Larijani told a convention of Iran’s diplomatic corps in Tehran on Aug. 12, according to The Iran Project, a pro-Iran news website.
Regarding LGBT people, Larijani said, “We do not provide these people with opportunity, but what they say — that we hang them — is a lie that they have fabricated.”
He did not deny that LGBT people are executed for same-sex intercourse.
He criticized “so-called supporters of human rights” who defend homosexuals, but did not protest Israeli attacks in the Gaza Strip.
In an alternative translation of his remarks, Larijani stated:

“They keep raising concerns about faggots. Based on our religious beliefs, these people are not tolerated, but saying that we kill homosexuals is a lie. In the Islamic Republic no one sticks their nose into the private lives of individuals to find out what kind of private violations are being committed. Islam believes in the inherent dignity and innocence of all humans, and therefore does not tolerate this filth [ i.e. homosexuality]. But [the Western countries] use this as an excuse to attack our human rights records.
Ayyatollah Larijani added,”They keep talking about human rights violations for a bunch of faggots, but when a thousand kids are murdered in Gaza, Mr. Obama justifies it by talking about Israel’s right to self defense.”

Larijani has been sanctioned by the European Union for human rights abuses, according to the Official Journal of the European Union.   He was cited as judiciary head for approving harsh punishments for “crimes against God” and “crimes against the state,” including the death penalty, floggings and amputation and for extreme punishments such as “stoning (16 people are currently under stoning sentence [in 2012]), executions by suspension strangulation, execution of juveniles, and public executions such as those where prisoners have been hung from bridges in front of crowds of thousands. He has also permitted corporal punishment sentences such as amputations and the dripping of acid into the eyes of the convicted.”
In the most recent report from the organization Iran Human Rights, two prisoners were hanged in public on Aug. 6 in southern Iran on charges of sodomy, Iran Human Rights reports.
Amnesty International reported that three people were executed in Iran in 2011 for sodomy.
 

View Comments (5)
  • The west could learn from Iran. Morals are on the decline as faggotry is on the rise. More and more confused kids self identify as faggots because they think that is a healthy, legitimate choice. Studies have shown time and again that faggots are mentally unstable and those who refuse to receive treatment should be euthanized like the immoral animals they are.

  • Is there a reliable source that he used the word ‘faggot’?
    I can read Persian so I’m curious to verify your translation of Larijani’s remarks.

    • I haven’t yet located the original text in Persian, but I did receive this reply:

      … knowing Larijani, he probably used the word “Hamjens baz”. In Persian, “Hamjens baz” is the equivalent of “womanizer” for same-sex practicing individuals (it literary means same-sexizer” , which roughly can be translated as fagots. The only word more offensive than that in person is to call a gay person “Kuni”, which means “bottom”.
      The correct way to refer to homosexuals is “hamjensgara” and to LGBTI people as “Degarbash”.

      — Colin Stewart, editor/publisher of this blog

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