Los Angeles Times

Iran gives drug offenders a reprieve

Suspension of death penalty spares lives of thousands convicted of nonviolent crimes.

- By Ramin Mostaghim and Shashank Bengali

TEHRAN — Iran has lifted the death penalty for certain nonviolent drug offenses, relaxing some of the world’s harshest laws on drug crimes and potentiall­y sparing the lives of thousands of death row inmates.

An amended narcotics law directs judges to suspend executions for 5,000 people convicted of drug-related offenses and review their cases, Mizan news agency, the mouthpiece of Iran’s judiciary, reported Wednesday.

Most of the 5,000 convicts would have their punishment­s “converted to life sentences,” Mohammad Ali Esfanani, assistant judge of the Iranian Supreme Court, told state media.

A spokesman for the judiciary committee of Iran’s parliament, Hassan Norouzi, told the Jam-e Jam daily newspaper that violent drug offenders — including those accused of murder in the course of drug crimes — would still be subject to the death penalty if convicted.

But the moratorium on executions for those found guilty of nonviolent crimes — such as drug smuggling — is a victory for reformists and human rights advocates who fought for years to change Iran’s draconian drug laws. Proponents of the changes say that 90% of those imprisoned on drug conviction­s are first-time offenders younger than 30.

The amended law had been in the works for more than two years, since a majority of Iran’s 290 lawmakers said they endorsed a moratorium. After parliament passed the bill, it won approval from Iran’s allpowerfu­l Guardian Council, a conservati­ve body made up of Islamic jurists and theologian­s.

Hard-liners had long opposed the changes, but the influence of moderates and reformists in parliament, and a rising backlash against executions, has contribute­d to a softening stance.

Lawmakers have raised the limits on the amounts of drugs one can possess before it becomes a capital offense. An earlier law provided for the death penalty if someone was caught with an ounce of cocaine; the new limit is 4.4 pounds.

Iran is in the grip of a terrible drug abuse problem, mainly driven by easy access to cheap and plentiful narcotics, especially opium, from neighborin­g Afghanista­n. Health officials say the nation of 80 million has more than 2 million drug addicts, but doctors say the actual figure is higher.

Iran puts more convicts to death per capita than any other country, most for drug crimes. Amnesty Internatio­nal says that since 1988, Iran has executed, usually by hanging, about 10,000 people for drug-related offenses.

“If implemente­d properly, this long-overdue reform will spare hundreds from the gallows, but that should be just the start,” Magdalena Mughrabi, Amnesty’s deputy Middle East and North Africa director, said in a statement.

“The Iranian authoritie­s must stop using the death penalty for drug-related offenses with a view to eventually abolishing it for all crimes.”

Saleh Nikbakht, an Iranian human rights lawyer, said that by making the new law retroactiv­e, Iranian authoritie­s could spare the lives of thousands.

“Now Iran won’t be the second country in the world, after China, for most executions,” Nikbakht said. “We will have a much lower ranking and that is good news.” shashank.bengali @latimes.com Twitter: @SBengali Special correspond­ent Mostaghim reported from Tehran and Times staff writer Bengali from Mumbai, India.

 ?? Vahid Salemi Associated Press ?? IRANIAN customs officers with drug-sniffing dogs on the border with Afghanista­n. Cheap and easily available opium from Afghanista­n has contribute­d to Iran’s drug abuse problem. Iran puts more convicts to death per capita than any other country, most...
Vahid Salemi Associated Press IRANIAN customs officers with drug-sniffing dogs on the border with Afghanista­n. Cheap and easily available opium from Afghanista­n has contribute­d to Iran’s drug abuse problem. Iran puts more convicts to death per capita than any other country, most...

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