At dawn today in Tehran’s Shahr-e Ray prison, Iran hanged Reyhaneh Jabbari despite a worldwide campaign to save her life.
Jabbari, 19 years old when her life went awry in September 2007, was a designer in the capital convicted of stabbing to death Morteza Abdolali Sarbandi — a former Ministry of Intelligence employee whom Jabbari said had attempted to rape her.
According to Jabbari, Sarbandi contracted her to redecorate his office. On the agreed day, Sarbandi and another man picked her up in their car and drove her to an unfamiliar location, stopping en route at a pharmacy to pick up some unknown articles later shown in court to be condoms and a sedative.
The room Sarbandi escorted her to looked filthy and uninhabited. When a suspicious Jabbari refused to close the door or doff her shawl for her “client”, Sarbandi grappled with her.
The young woman managed to get her hands on a knife,* she said, and stick it in his back, then fled the building back to the city. She was arrested late that night at her home. According to Jabbari, Sarbandi was still quite alive as she left, and the last thing she saw at the scene was his never-identified companion — who had stayed in the car initially — bursting into the room to fight with Sarbandi himself for some reason she could not comprehend.
Jabbari was condemned in 2009 and even as her sentence was re-confirmed in the ensuing years by court after court, it became an international cause celebre — executing a woman for stopping her would-be rapist. Hundreds of thousands of sympathizers tweeted, Facebooked and signed petitions; so small as such outcry can seem against an implacable state, they did at least give the impression of factoring into a last-minute reprieve Jabbari received ahead of her previous hanging-date four weeks ago. Iranian celebrities too joined in the reprieve campaign along with usual suspects like Amnesty International.
Unfortunately, Jabbari’s accusing her victim of sexual assault did not position her very well for obtaining a reprieve from Sarbandi’s family — which has the power under Iranian law to pardon offenders, right up to and even during the hanging. Sarbandi’s eldest son accused her of lying and of hiding the identity of the second man, the one whom Jabbari suggested might have been the true murderer.
“Only when her true intentions are exposed and she tells the truth about her accomplice and what really went down will we be prepared to grant mercy,” Jalal Sarbandi insisted.
Today, her lips are sealed.
I don’t want you to wear black clothing for me. Do your best to forget my difficult days. Give me to the wind to take away.
-From a last will Jabbari left as voice mail for her mother
* This was Jabbari’s own knife, one she had purchased two days before the incident.
On this day..
- 1944: Zainal Mustafa, resister
- 1974: Walkiria Afonso da Costa, the last Araguaia guerrilla
- 2009: Two Somali spies
- 1704: "French Peter"
- 1770: William Linsey, resolutely bent upon working wickedness
- 1781: Gaspard de Besse, social bandit
- Feast Day of Saints Crispin and Crispinian
- 2006: Danny Rolling, the Gainesville Ripper
- 330 B.C.E.: Philotas, Alexander the Great Companion
- 1769: Nicolas de Lafreniere and four others for the Louisiana Rebellion
- 1415: French prisoners at the Battle of Agincourt
- 2007: Five young men
This travesty of justice will not go unanswered. Yahweh knows the truth and will deal with those who committed the actual crime as well as the murder of this innocent woman.
I have saved Reyhaneh’s photo since 2014.
Her bravery and honesty will last forever and she is an indpiration of truth.
How horrible. RIP, Reyhaneh. May Allah grant you eternal Justice.
Thank you for a sad and timely article that reminds us that justice still has a long way to go and needs constant vigilance. This scenerio could happen anyplace, even in our own country.
Ugh, this is unacceptable on so many levels. My thoughts are with her surviving family.