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Iran sentences to death two gay rights activists
By Stuart WILLIAMS
Paris (AFP) Sept 5, 2022

EU's Borrell 'less confident' Iran deal can be quickly saved
Brussels (AFP) Sept 5, 2022 - The European Union's foreign policy chief Josep Borrell, who is shepherding attempts to save the suspended Iran nuclear deal, said Monday that recent exchanges left him "less confident".

Borrell said of Iran's latest response to an EU-drafted text last week, which hardened Tehran's demands on Washington, "if the purpose is to close the deal quickly, it is not going to help it".

On August 7, Borrell put forward what he called a final text to restore the 2015 accord, which was abandoned by former US president Donald Trump in 2018.

Talks to revive the nuclear deal known as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action have been ongoing in Vienna since April 2021, and in recent weeks Iran and Washington have been responding to the EU text.

On Thursday, however, Washington said that Iran's latest proposed changes to the text were "not constructive" and on Monday Iran complained that it had not yet received an official US response.

Speaking at a news conference in Brussels, Borrell said that his initial "carefully balanced" text had been "well received" and that initially it had seemed the parties were converging on a common position.

"But the last interaction is not converging, it is diverging," he said. "That is very much worrisome, if the process does not converge. The whole process is in danger.

"So I have to say that the last answer I got, if the purpose is to close the deal quickly, it is not going to help it," he said.

"So what I'm doing to keep consulting with all other JCPOA participants, and in particular the US.

"But I'm sorry to say that I am less confident today than 28 hours before about the convergence of the negotiation process and about the prospect of closing the deal right now."

A court in Iran has sentenced to death two gay rights activists on charges of promoting homosexuality, campaigners said Monday, urging pressure from the international community to stop the implementation of the verdicts.

The two women, Zahra Sedighi Hamedani, 31, and Elham Chubdar, 24, were sentenced to death by the court in the northwestern town of Urmia, the Hengaw Kurdish rights organisation said.

They were convicted of "spreading corruption on earth" -- a charge frequently imposed on defendants deemed to have broken the country's sharia laws, it added.

They were informed of the sentence while in detention in the women's wing of the Urmia jail.

In a short statement, the Iranian judiciary confirmed that the sentences had been issued.

Hengaw said that they had also been charged with promoting Christianity and communicating with media opposing the Iranian regime.

Another woman, named as Soheila Ashrafi, 52, from Urmia, has been arrested in the same case and is waiting to hear her verdict.

There has for months been concern about the fate of Sedighi Hamedani, also known as Sareh, a prominent Iranian LGBTQ activist.

She was arrested in October by Iranian security forces while trying to flee into neighbouring Turkey after returning to Iran from Iraqi Kurdistan, where she had been based.

Sedighi Hamedani was subsequently held in solitary confinement for almost two months.

- 'Demand pressure' -

Shadi Amin, a coordinator for the Germany-based Iranian LGBTQ rights group 6Rang, also confirmed the execution verdicts, which she said the group had been aware of since Thursday but could now disclose after receiving permission from the families.

"We now demand pressure from Germany and other foreign governments" on Iran for the release of the two women, she told AFP.

"This is the first time that a woman has been sentenced to death in Iran for her sexual orientation," she added.

Amnesty International said in January the charges stemmed from her publicly defending gay rights on social media and appearing in a BBC documentary aired in May 2021 about the abuses LGBTQ people suffer in the Kurdistan Region of northern Iraq.

She had decided to leave Iraqi Kurdistan after being detained by the regional authorities. It appears she crossed into Iran again before trying to head for Turkey.

Hengaw said Sedighi Hamedani had been deprived of the right to a lawyer during her detention and agents had threatened her with her execution, insulted her appearance and warned her she could lose custody of her two children.

Activists frequently denounce Iran's treatment of LGBTQ individuals.

Homosexuality is banned in Iran with its penal code explicitly criminalising same-sex sexual behaviour for both men and women.

Before leaving Iraqi Kurdistan, Sedighi Hamedani had sent 6Rang videos to be made public in case she failed to make it to safety.

"We, the LGBTI community, are suffering. Whether through death or freedom, we will remain true to ourselves," she said in one of the videos.

"I hope to achieve freedom," she added, also alleging that she had been tortured with methods including electrocution while in Iraqi Kurdish custody.

Activists accuse Iran of being in the throes of a major crackdown that is affecting all areas of society, including a new push against the Bahai religious minority, a surge in executions and arrests of foreign nationals.


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