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To: frankw1900 who wrote (3385)11/26/2002 5:08:00 PM
From: Condor  Respond to of 6901
 
:o) Isn't this priceless...they're wanting him to appeal so they can get themselves out of the mess. Priceless.
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Iran Scholar Warned Death Verdict Final
By ALI AKBAR DAREINI 11/26/2002 15:39:38 EST

TEHRAN, Iran (AP) - Iran's chief prosecutor warned Tuesday that a history professor's
death sentence for questioning hard-line rule will be final if he continues refusing to
appeal, the official Islamic Republic News Agency reported.

Hashem Aghajari, a professor at a university in Tehran, has refused to appeal -
challenging the judiciary to carry out a sentence that has provoked the largest student
demonstrations in three years.

"Aghajari is obliged to appeal. If he does not appeal within the 20-day period, the
verdict will be final," IRNA quoted hard-line cleric Abdol-Nabi Namazi as saying.

The professor has until Dec. 2 to file an appeal, but his lawyer, Saleh Nikbakht, told
The Associated Press on Tuesday that Aghajari refuses to do so.

Nikbakht argued, however, that the verdict could be reconsidered even if his client does
not file an appeal.

"The supreme leader, judiciary chief, chief prosecutor, head of supreme court and the
judge investigating the case have the legal right to reconsider the verdict if they
consider the sentence is wrong," Nikbakht said. "Comments by the chief prosecutor
contradict the law."

Iran's supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who has the final say on all state
matters, ordered the judiciary on Nov. 16 to reconsider the verdict.

Aghajari's case underscores the power struggle between reformists supporting
President Mohammad Khatami's program of social and political freedoms and
hard-liners who control the police and judiciary.

A Tehran court, meanwhile, ordered the arrest of four prominent reformist students who
led protests over the sentence, IRNA reported Tuesday.

Abdollah Momeni and Akbar Atri were beaten by plainclothes security agents, said
student leader Arash Pahlavan-Nasir.

Two others, Saeed Razavi and Amir Hussein Balali, were detained later. It wasn't
known where the four were being held.

"Hard-liners, including the judiciary, think they can intimidate and silence students by
their illegal violent practices. They are wrong. It only deepens public hatred of them,"
Pahlavan-Nasir said.

Tehran Deputy Governor Ebrahim Rezaei Babadi criticized the arrests as "contrary to
the country's interests" but called on students to remain calm, IRNA reported
Tuesday.



To: frankw1900 who wrote (3385)11/26/2002 5:25:26 PM
From: Ilaine  Respond to of 6901
 
>>Southern Baptists haven't lately stoned to death any adulterers.<<

Based on my knowledge of Southern Baptists, they'd be held back by the old "let he who is without sin cast the first stone" thingy.