Iran Executes Child Marriage Victim For Spouse Killing

Iranian authorities have executed Samira Sabzian-Fard, a victim of child marriage who was convicted of murdering her husband.

Iranian authorities have executed Samira Sabzian-Fard, a victim of child marriage who was convicted of murdering her husband.
Sabzian-Fard, married at the age of 15, faced the implementation of her death sentence for killing her husband four years after their marriage in 2013, according to the Norway-based Iran Human Rights (IHR).
Mahmood Amiry-Moghaddam, the Director of IHR, branded her execution as a “stark reflection of an inefficient and corrupt government resorting to violence and intimidation to sustain itself.” The IHR has called on the international community to hold Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei and other officials of the Islamic Republic accountable for such actions.
Sabzian-Fard's story is emblematic of women in Iran who, at a young age, are forced into marriage and subsequently become victims of marital issues. The latest report from the Iranian Statistical Center reveals a distressing statistic: at least 27,448 girls under the age of 15 in Iran married in 2022 alone.
Simultaneously, there has been an intensification of policies encouraging marriage in the country, as emphasized by the Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei. In recent years, targeted efforts have been made to reduce the age of marriage for girls and encourage families to facilitate the marriage of their daughters. One in five marriages involves minors, girls allowed to marry as young as 13.
The regime's efforts have been championed by some members of the parliament, government officials, and various cultural and educational institutions.
Iran is the world's leading executor of women, with a minimum of 16 reported executions in 2022 and a total of at least 17 women executed in the country so far this year. This grim reality is exacerbated by Iranian laws that prevent women from seeking divorce, even in cases of domestic violence.

While the Iranian government's response to reports about a large embezzlement of public funds has been mostly dismissive, the media continue to discuss its implications.
Centrist Aftab News website in Tehran wrote in a commentary on Monday that the money in question, which could be more than $3 billion, is 15 times more than the funds needed to implement the long-awaited pension adjustment to make life easier for retirees. An annual inflation rate of around 50 percent has impoverished retirees and wage earners.
The website also argued that the amount was enough for establishing up to nine major petrochemical plants.
However, calculations like that will be meaningful only if one could assume that the embezzled money was going to be spent in the interest of the public and was not going to be spent on the wars in the region.

A retired government employee told Aftab News that if the money was allocated to pensioners, not only they would climb out of poverty, but the government’s bankrupt Pension Fund could also reach a surplus to spend on the retiree healthcare.
One of the recurrent slogans chanted by unpaid pensioners during their recurrent protests is: "Our problems will be solved if there was only one less embezzlement case."
Massoud Pezeshkian, a lawmaker from Tabriz told reporters, "The underlying reason for all these corruption, land grabbing and bribery cases is that Iran does not have a transparent data system. Unless we have such a system, everyone will point fingers at others and the problem will remain unsolved.
Meanwhile, other reports about the case have unearthed a letter that the managing director of the implicated Debsh Tea Company, Akbar Rahimi, wrote to President Ebrahim Raisi more than a month before the scandal became news.
The publication of the letter by the press on Monday revealed that the Raisi Administration showed no tangible reaction to the revelation. In the letter, the company's head had warned that it might have to stop all of its activities within a few days and that all of more than 6,000 of its employees might lose their jobs.
In the letter, Rahimi spoke about limitations imposed on the activities of the company. He possibly meant that the Judiciary had started investigations about the company. Rahimi named the Intelligence office of Karaj, the capital of Alborz Province near Tehran as one of the offices that created problems for the tea company. He further complained that the limitations were imposed on the company's activity without any prior notice.
In another development, Expediency Council member Ahmad Tavakoli wrote in a letter to President Raisi that there is possibly another corruption case under way as the government has given a concession to a hitherto unknown company to import 13 million tons of essential commodities under strict secrecy and without meeting legal formalities.
Tavakoli said that giving such a big concession to a new company is unprecedented. He added that the profit of the importing operation is supposed to be divided on a fifty-fifty basis between the company and those who granted the concession to it.
The politician added that the company is supposed to import 13 million tons of essential commodities, including as rice, meat, and poultry feed while it has never imported even one ton of such goods. These are goods that the slightest irregularity or delay in their import could cause havoc in the country.
Tavakoli further warned that the confidential nature of the concession makes this deal dangerously non-transparent. He revealed that in May 2022, the Minister of Agriculture ordered the Central bank to pay 735 million euros (around $800m) to a foreign company before any goods arrived in Iran.
The consecutive revelations of corruption cases not only badly damages the image of hardliners running the government, but it also reflects badly on Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, who has been ruling Iran for 34 years.

In a rare instance, two police officers and two plainclothesmen in Iran have been detained in connection with the attempted murder of protester Pouria Alipour.
During the initial weeks of the Iranian people's uprising last year, a video surfaced showing one officer driving over Alipour with a motorcycle, while another fired at him from a distance of less than a meter in a suburb of Tehran.
It is a rare case to come to trial in the wake of protests in which over 500 civilians were killed and tens of thousands more rounded up and imprisoned by state security apparatus in the uprising following the death in morality police custody of Mahsa Amini, arrested for the inappropriate use of her hijab.
In an interview with Emtedad News, Alipour's lawyer, Payam Dorafshan, said, "The new allegations include intentional manslaughter, unauthorized shooting, intentional assault, and creating a hostile view towards armed forces, as determined by the military investigator."
The release of the video of Alipour's attempted murder in November 2022 stirred public outrage in Iran. Some social media users described the footage as the "Islamic Republic unfiltered," while others interpreted it as "street-level assassination of dissenters."
Since the beginning of the Women, Life, Freedom uprising, numerous reports of protesters being beaten and mistreated by the security forces of the Islamic Republic have surfaced including mass blinding and state-sanctioned sexual violence, according to Iran's Me Too movement reports.
In addition to the hundreds of citizens killed and thousands detained during the uprising, the families of the plaintiffs have also faced severe pressure from the Iranian government over the past year.

Iranian Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian met with Hamas's political leader, Ismail Haniyeh, in Doha on Wednesday, as fighting continued in Gaza.
The meeting serves as a precursor to Haniyeh's forthcoming trip to Egypt for negotiations aimed at bringing an end to the ongoing conflict with Israel.
Amir-Abdollahian traveled to Doha on Tuesday for bilateral talks with Qatari officials, focusing on regional developments, particularly the situation in Gaza. A French news agency, citing a source close to Hamas, revealed that Haniyeh is leading a "high-level delegation" to Egypt in a bid to negotiate with Egypt's intelligence chief and other officials with the goal of "ending the war and reaching an agreement on the release of prisoners", referring to the Palestinians held in Israeli jails.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu confirmed that the head of Mossad, Israel's intelligence and special operations organization, has embarked on trips to two countries for negotiations concerning a potential agreement with Hamas for the release of the more than 130 hostages still held by the terror group.
In tandem with the developments, Israeli sources shared with Axios on Tuesday that Israel proposed a one-week ceasefire in the Gaza conflict as part of a new agreement to secure the release of hostages. The proposal represents Israel's first initiative since the resumption of hostilities following a one-week ceasefire.
The Iranian Foreign Minister’s trip to Doha is the fourth since the Hamas attack on Israeli soil on October 7—a move that swiftly implicated Iran in the regional conflict. The Islamic Republic terms Hamas and its proxy groups as "resistance forces," while the UK, Europe and the United States officially designate Hamas as a terrorist organization.

During a televised interview on December 16, Melanie Joly, Canada’s Global Affairs minister, did not rule out designating Iran’s IRGC as a terrorist organization.
A month ago, Prime Minister Trudeau would not even entertain the possibility of designating IRGC. Joly’s comments thus signal a shift in Canada’s attitude towards the Islamic Republic of Iran and its revolutionary praetorian guard, the IRGC. In fact, one may argue that Canada’s shift has come too late for many. At least since the summer of 2020, when it became abundantly clear that the IRGC had shot down the PS752 Ukrainian passenger airliner with 63 Canadians on board and almost a dozen more Canadian permanent residents, many Iranian Canadians have been demanding such a designation. There are other concrete signs that point to such a possibility. Last week, Canada declared that several former Islamic Republic of Iran (IRI) officials were scheduled for deportation hearings. A fortnight before Joly’s interview, dozens of Iranian regime officials were denied entry to Canada.
Since 1990s, the Iranian regime has been building a solid network of patronage in Canada. The Tehran regime has vied for, and won, the patronage of various “Islamic” institutions in major Canadian cities, whilst current and former regime’s senior officials’ relatives, not to mention a former high ranking police chief, have been finding a home away from home in Canada in the same period.
Canada is now on board with other countries in actively dismantling Iran’s network and sending away officials and relatives. The universal backlash against the IRI network sometimes cloaked as “religious centers” seems to be gathering momentum indeed. Only recently did the German federal police raid the Imam Ali Islamic center in Hamburg as well as a dozen more such institution across Germany.
The Iranian Canadian victims of IRI have long engaged successive Canadian governments to dismantle the regime’s unofficial business and family network of present and former regime officials and after over a decade of constant pressure their activism seems to be bearing some fruit.

Historically, Canada-IRI relations have never been on good terms. During the 1979-80 US embassy hostage crisis in Tehran, the Canadian embassy participated in a CIA operation to help smuggle some of the diplomats that had escaped the hostage takers unnoticed, as depicted in Argo, resulting in the embassy’s closure until 1988. Significantly, even though Canada closed its embassy in the aftermath of the operation, the Iranian regime kept its embassy open, so did the Iranian National Petroleum Company continue to have its office open in Calgary, Alberta. From 1988 to 2012, Canada’s stance towards Iran was dubbed by Canadian diplomatic chiefs as “Controlled Engagement.” In this period, over 200,000 Iranians migrated to Canada; a majority of whom through point-based immigration system, business, and study visas.
In 2012, Harper’s government officially ended Canada’s “controlled engagement” with IRI by cutting ties and closing the embassy in Tehran. This time, however, the IRI closed its embassy in Ottawa as well. A combination of factors, from the IRI’s security forces’ extrajudicial killing of the Iranian Canadian Zahra Kazemi to IRI’s crackdown of protesters during 2009 post-presidential elections rising, and the regime’s intransigence during the nuclear negotiations, have been cited as the reasons behind the Harper government’s decision to cut ties with Iran. Yet, Harper’s cutting ties with Tehran did not disrupt the continued migration of many regime officials and their relatives to Canada. In fact, the closure of embassies and Harper government’s designation of IRGC’s Quds Force as a terrorist entity did not disrupt the expansion of the regime’s network in Canada.
As of January 2020, ever more united in their demands for the removal of regime’s network from Canada, several individual relatives of PS752 victims and PS752 association of families launched public awareness campaigns about IRGC and IRI’s network in Canada. In fact, some of the victims’ families have successfully taken the Iranian regime to Canadian courts. Despite all these efforts, it was Tehran’s brutal crackdown of autumn 2022 nationwide protests in the aftermath of the extrajudicial killing of Mahsa Jina Amini that consolidated the Iranian Canadian community’s pressure on Trudeau’s government to introduce concrete measures against the IRI. Thus, on 7 October 2022, PM Trudeau’s office announced its intention to take measures against the Tehran regime, which were followed by November 2022 designation of IRI as a regime engaged in “terrorism and systematic and gross human rights violations”. The events of the past year have undoubtedly led to a flourishing of Iranian Canadian civil society organization intent upon of the removal the Iranian regime’s network from Canada. Another thorny subject has been the designation of the IRGC as a terrorist entity.

Iran’s Religious Patronage Network in Canada
Two publicly reported cases shed light on how aware the Canadian government has been of the IRI’s influence network in Canada. The first one is the case of the Canadian chapter of Ahla’al Bayt World Assembly (AABAW) that was brought to the public’s attention in February 2019. Ali Khamenei, Iran’s supreme leader, established AABAW in Tehran in 1990. The institution became a global nexus to spread an Iranian government endorsed view of Shia Islam with various chapters across many western liberal democracies including Canada. AABAW’s express purpose is promoting unity amongst the Shia community whilst spreading an unblemished and apologist version of IRI’s view of Shia Islam. Matters between Canada and AABAW came to a head when in 2019 Canada Revenue Agency held the Canadian chapter of this entity to account by revoking its charity status accusing it of spreading the Iranian regime’s official ideology.
Unsurprisingly, the spotting of a man implicated in police brutality and human rights violations caused an outcry in the Iranian Canadian community and led to Trudeau’s government banning Talaei from ever returning to Canada.
The Henareh Family Network and the Case of IRI Money Laundering Networks
Between January and April 2023, Trudeau’s government commenced extensive public consultations with various stakeholders to address the IRI’s oligarchs’, and their relatives’, abuse of Canada’s financial network. Rt. Hon. Chrystia Freeland and her assistants met several times with various groups of Iranian Canadians from diverse professional fields.
The tête-à-tête with the ministers’ assistants established that even before the consultations began, the government was fully apprised of the minutiae of the regime’s activities and watchful of their many operations. The two groups, government officials and community activists, explored financial intelligence and legislative tools through which Canada could tackle the Iranian regime’s complex network. The consultation revealed how the regime’s network in Canada takes advantage of non-profit charities, private enterprises, and foreign currency exchange businesses in major Canadian cities. Iranian-owned currency exchange businesses notably stood out as one of many instruments to subvert the ability of the Canadian government’s financial intelligence network to track down the extra-legal activities of the regime officials and their dependents in Canada.
The consultation revealed how the regime’s network in Canada takes advantage of non-profit charities, private enterprises, and foreign currency exchanges in major Canadian cities. Foreign currencies notably stood out as one of many instruments to subvert the ability of the Canadian government’s financial intelligence network to track down the extra-legal activities of the regime officials and their dependents in Canada.
The consultations further shed light on one specific US federal prosecution of Iranian Canadians, namely Salim Henareh of the Greater Toronto Area and his brother Khalil, with links to the Iranian regime. The Henareh brothers of Toronto are currently being prosecuted for helping the IRI circumvent US sanctions. In fact, as of October 2023, court documents show that the IRI’s influence network has even been able to know about RCMPs’ secret operation about Henareh’s international money laundering activities, and network, by getting tips from former RCMP officer Cameron Ortis. Henareh is a name all too familiar to both Canadian and US intelligence, one might add. In 2013, Manhattan Federal District Court convicted Siavosh Henareh, who operated out of Romania, on charges of trafficking heroine to the US with the purpose of funneling the proceeds to the Lebanese Hezbollah, the armed proxy of the Tehran regime. Ten years later, Siavosh Henareh is still testing every available legal venue to win back his freedom whilst Khalil and Salim Henareh’s fate is yet to be determined by the US federal court in LA, California.
The long tale of dismantling IRI’s complex network in Canada will not end with a series of deportations or the closure of one “religious charity” or another questionable business enterprise. Canada has allowed thousands of those with affiliations of various degrees to migrate to Canada and set themselves up across multitude sectors. These individuals often appear to have very “peaceful” and “peaceable intentions” and are deserving of the presumption of innocence per Canada’s Charter of Rights and Freedom.
However, there are still those who simply do their “bit” for a regime that is accountable to no one and is accused of killing Canadians with impunity. The threat that such individuals and entities pose against other Canadians on Canada’s soil can also not be exaggerated. Last year’s nationwide protests in Iran revealed that these pro-Islamic Republic individuals have no compunction in acting on the regime’s behalf to even silence the voice of dissent in Canada. In November 2022, Canada’s Security and Intelligence Services reported that pro-Iranian regime individuals had already made credible death threats against anti-regime Iranian Canadians.
Thus, the overall security of Canada, from the security of its citizens to the security of its financial sector, is at stake. Canada should also ensure that it does not become a haven for the commission of financial crimes. Whilst everyone welcomes the deportation of those implicated with a regime accused of human rights violations and crimes against humanity, the whole country is watching if these actions are followed through a surgical investigation of the many institutions of questionable provenance.
In the end, in contemporary polarized domestic politics every single vote can make or unmake a government. Whether Trudeau’s minority liberal government outlasts 2024 into a spring election in 2025 or not, its actions between now and then against the Iranian regime’s network in Canada will echo at the ballot box along with many other socio-economic factors. And even if the liberals lose the next election, any current member of Trudeau’s cabinet who wish to count on the Iranian Canadian vote may wish to see through dismantling the Iranian regime’s network in Canada. To designate or not to designate IRGC a terrorist entity is a political dilemma like any other and as such the considerations of the ballot box may afford it one way or the other the most unerring response.

Iran has accused the Stockholm Court of Appeals in Sweden of bias by upholding the life sentence of a former jailor for his role in the 1988 prison killings.
Reiterating the official line that Sweden prosecuted and convicted Hamid Nouri on the basis of false allegation by the exiled opposition group Mujahedin-e Khalq Organization (MEK), the official news website IRNA claimed that Sweden has violated Nouri’s human rights. The website reflecting the government's position alleged that Sweden tortured Nouri by keeping him in solitary confinement and “repeatedly moving him between detention centers”, and putting another prisoner with “serious mental issues” in his cell.
The Iranian foreign ministry has not yet reacted to the Stockholm Court of Appeals decision on Tuesday, which came after months of examining evidence and deliberation.
In a statement, 452 Iranian activists and members of victims’ families welcomed the court’s decision, calling it a “huge victory for the Iranian justice movement.” They believe it paves the way for bringing the regime and other violators of human rights to justice in the future.

“Let us remind that in the summer of 1988, Ebrahim Raisi, who is the president of the Islamic Republic with [Supreme Leader Ali] Khamenei’s firm support, was among the members of the death committee, of which Hamid Nouri was an agent,” the statement said.
Nouri, arrested upon arrival in Sweden in November 2019, was convicted by a Swedish court in July 2022 and sentenced to life for human rights violations as a prison official in the 1980s.
Plaintiffs in the case alleged that Hamid Nouri, 61, an assistant prosecutor and a member of the execution committee at Gohardasht Prison near Tehran, played a key role in the torture, execution, and secret burial of thousands of prisoners, including members of the Mujahedin-e Khalq Organization (MEK) and various Marxist groups, in the summer of 1988. In court, Nouri denied any connection with the executions.

Many, including UN Special Rapporteur on Extra-Judicial Executions Agnes Callamard, called his arrest an "important first step towards justice for the 1988 massacre." This marks the first time someone has been charged in relation to the events that took place in 1988 in Iran and prosecuted in another country.
The execution of thousands of political prisoners, which occurred over a few weeks, is often considered one of the darkest secrets in the history of the Islamic Republic. Many victims, initially sentenced to prison, were executed when they refused to denounce their beliefs.
The regime clandestinely buried victims in unmarked, mass graves. Families were often informed months after the executions and kept unaware of the graves' locations. The regime has prohibited the erection of gravestones at these sites, and family members visiting the mass graves are frequently harassed. Security agents even uproot trees planted by family members to mark the graves.
The decision to purge political prisoners was taken at the highest level and was endorsed by Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, the founder of the Islamic Republic. Khomeini's chosen successor, Ayatollah Hossein-Ali Montazeri (1922-2009), who protested the massacre and called it a crime against humanity was demoted by Khomeini. Montazeri spent several years under house arrest after Khomeini's death in 1989 for criticizing the new successor, Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, and questioning his legitimacy.
International affairs and human rights deputy of the Iranian judiciary, Kazem Gharibabadi, in July accused Sweden of taking Nouri “hostage” and demanded his release while alleging that Sweden had no evidence against Nouri and was only defending the interests of MEK.
A Swedish EU diplomat, 33-year-old Johan Niels Floderus who was put on trial in December , and a 52-year-old Swedish-Iranian doctor, Ahmadreza Djalali (Jalali), are currently being held in Iran on charges of spying for Israel. Iranian authorities have several times threatened to execute Djalali, allegedly to force Sweden to release Nouri, and brought charges against Floderus that entail a death sentence.