Friday, March 31, 2017

Who Would Want To Live In A Country Like This. If Sharia Law Becomes The Law Of The Land, This Is What You Will See

Iran Sentences 21-Year-Old To Death After ‘Insulting Islam’ On Messenger App

Hassan Ghaedi/AFP/Getty Images
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Free speech and Islam appear to be sworn enemies. Anybody who dares
to draw the Prophet, let alone insults Islam, must face the firing squad.
That’s exactly what happened to 21-year-old Sina Dehghan. According
 to The Daily MailDenghan “has been sentenced to death after 'insulting
 the prophet' of Islam on an instant messaging app. Sina Dehghan was
 19 when he was arrested by the Iranian revolutionary guard at a military
barracks in Tehran in October 2015 for insulting the national religion
on the messaging app LINE.”
Iranian authorities managed to extract a forced confession out of
 Dehghan, say human rights activists. Authorities promised the
young man a pardon if chose to confess his so-called crime. He
obliged and the authorities double-crossed him. The confession was
 taped on-camera and prosecutors have used the footage to
 incriminate the young man.
“But after signing the confession, prosecutors dropped the agreement
and kept Dehghan incarcerated at Arak Prison,” notes The Mail.
Iran also promised Dehghan’s release in exchange for his family’s
obedience and quiet during the judicial process, adding another lie
 to the pile.
It’s unclear what Dehghan actually said on the messaging app that the
 zealot mullahs of Iran found so offensive. But that’s immaterial. As an
 Islamic supremacist regime, Iran does not pay deference to the idea
 of free speech. Islam supersedes all.



Dehghan’s death penalty was confirmed in January and upheld by
 Tehran’s highest court. Insulting the prophet is punishable by death,
according to Iranian Penal Code.
Anyone can fall victim to the Islamophobia thought police. Anyone.
Case in point. Dehghan “was a conscript posted as a guard in military
 barracks,” explains The Mail. “[He] had just four days left in his military
service when he was arrested in 2015."
According to Iran's Islamic Penal Code, insulting the prophet is
 punishable by death.
Dehghan’s co-defendents, Sahar Eliasi and Mohammad Nouri, were
also charged and convicted for similar offenses. Elias was sentenced
 to seven years in prison, but successfully cut down his punishment to
 three years after going through an appeals court process. Nouri was
 less lucky. He was sentenced to death for insulting the prophet.
 International monitors and human rights groups have yet to receive
 information about the Supreme Court’s ruling on his fate.

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