(16 January 2011) The International Campaign for Human Rights in Iran called  on the Iranian Parliament and the Judiciary to immediately institute a  moratorium on executions and to move swiftly to abolish the death  penalty, in the face of skyrocketing executions following unfair trials  and opaque judicial proceedings.Since  the beginning of the New Year, Iran has hanged 47 prisoners, or an  average of about one person every eight hours. Iran executes more people  per capita than any other country, and in absolute numbers, is second  only to China.  On  Saturday, 15 January 2011, Iran hanged a Kurdish prisoner some Iranian  websites have identified as Hossein Khazri, a Kurdish political prisoner  on the death row. A local official in the province of Western  Azerbaijan told media that “a member of the Pejak (an armed Kurdish  guerilla group)” was hanged in Urumiye prison on Saturday morning. He  did not name the executed prisoner.  Khazri’s  brother told the Campaign that the authorities have not provided any  information to the family about the execution of his brother. Hossein  Khazri had denied charges against him and said he was severely tortured.  “The  Iranian Judiciary is on an execution binge orchestrated by the  intelligence and security agencies,” stated Aaron Rhodes, a spokesperson  for the Campaign.  “The  execution of Kurdish activists, without fair trials and following  torture, increasingly appears as a systematic, politically motivated  process,” he said.  In  addition to the execution of Khazri, Iranian media have reported a  total of 46 executions in 2011: seven in Kermanshah on 1 January,  sixteen in Ahwaz on 5 January, one in Asfaryan on 8 January, eight in  Qom on 9 January, seven in Tehran on 12 January, five in Khorramabad on  13 January, two in Boroujerd on 14 January.  Khazri, who is around 29 years old, was convicted of being Mohareb,  “an enemy of God,” on 11 July 2009, on the basis that he “endangered  state security.” He reported in a letter to international organizations  that he had been tortured while in prisons run by the Intelligence  Ministry and the Revolutionary Guards, but according to Amnesty  International, his request for an investigation was denied.  He had  refused to confess to committing any of the crimes for which he was  convicted.  Another  Kurdish activist, Habibollah Latifi, was about to be hung on 26  December 2010, but the execution was halted.  The Campaign considers him  still at grave risk.  On 9 May 2010, Kurdish activists Farzad Kamangar and Shirin Alam Holi were hung.  At  least 14 other Kurdish prisoners are in danger of execution: Zeinab  Jalilian, Shirkoo Moarefi, Rostam Arkia, Mostafa Salimi, Anvar Rostami,  Rashid Akhkandi, Mohammad Amin Aghooshi, Ahmad Pooladkhani, Seyed Sami  Husseini, Seyed Jamal Mohammadi, Hasan Talei, Iraj Mohammadi, Mohammad  Amin Abdollahi and Ghader Mohammadzadeh.  According to information received by and reported by the Campaign, the number of executions in Iran is apparently even higher than  previously reported.   Multiple and reliable reports indicate that  secret, mass executions of more than a hundred have taken place in  Mashad’s Vakilabad prison.  “When  executions become the method of choice to solve political and practical  problems, human life is being tragically devalued in Iran,” Rhodes  said.  The International Campaign for Human Rights in Iran called upon Iran to institute an immediate moratorium on executions and  an independent review of all pending death penalty cases, including  those of juvenile offenders who have allegedly committed crimes under  the age of 18, and to take steps toward the abolition of the death  penalty.  Source: http://www.iranhumanrights.org/2011/01/iran-on-%E2%80%9Cexecution-binge%E2%80%9D-immediate-moratorium-urged/  
			