Tuesday, January 13, 2009

Rule of Thumb In Iran: Do NOT Fool Around


Okay, remember now folks that the year is 2009 when you read this...it may not seem like it is, but indeed it is 2009. Two Iranian men were publicly stoned to death for commiting adultery while a third one was spared death because he was able to free himself from his stoning pit. Just keep repeating to yourself....."Religion of Peace, Religion of Peace." Here's some of the details from Breitbart:


Two men convicted of adultery were stoned to death in northeastern Iran last month but a third convicted man managed to escape, Iran's judiciary spokesman said Tuesday.

Under Iran's Islamic law, adultery is punishable by stoning, but such sentences are rare. International human rights groups have long criticized stoning in Iran as a cruel form of punishment.
Jamshidi did not describe how the stonings were carried out. But typically under Islamic rulings, a man is buried up to his waist, while a woman is buried up to her neck. Those carrying out the verdict then throw stones until the person dies. If the person manages to escape from the hole, he or she will remain free under Islamic law.
"Given that the third person managed to pull himself out of the hole, the verdict was not carried out," Jamshidi told reporters.

This does provide for an interesting scenario doesn't it? We have a country, in Iran, where on one side of the country we have people heaving stones onto the upper torso of men, killing them while on the other side of the country they are building nuclear weapons.

And these are the folks that a President Obama wants to sit down with.


Two men stoned to death in Iran

TEHRAN, Iran (AP) - Two men convicted of adultery were stoned to death in northeastern Iran last month but a third convicted man managed to escape, Iran's judiciary spokesman said Tuesday.
Ali Reza Jamshidi said the stoning took place in the city of Mashhad in late December but did not provide the names of the convicted men.
Under Iran's Islamic law, adultery is punishable by stoning, but such sentences are rare. International human rights groups have long criticized stoning in Iran as a cruel form of punishment.
Jamshidi did not describe how the stonings were carried out. But typically under Islamic rulings, a man is buried up to his waist, while a woman is buried up to her neck. Those carrying out the verdict then throw stones until the person dies. If the person manages to escape from the hole, he or she will remain free under Islamic law.
"Given that the third person managed to pull himself out of the hole, the verdict was not carried out," Jamshidi told reporters.
Stonings were widely carried out in the early years after the 1979 Islamic revolution that toppled the pro-Western government and brought hardline clerics to power. But in recent years, it has seldom been applied, although the government rarely confirms when it carries out stoning sentences.
The last time Iran reported a death by stoning was in July 2007 when Jamshidi said a man convicted of adultery was stoned to death in a village in northern Iran.
Women's rights activists headed by feminist lawyer Shadi Sadr have been campaigning to have the sentence removed from Iran's statutes.
Iran's reformist legislators have demanded an end to death by stoning as a punishment for adultery, but opposition from hardline clerics has sidelined their efforts.

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