Five sentenced to death over post-election unrest in Iran

TEHRAN - Five people have been sentenced to death and 81 have received jail terms of up to 15 years in connection with unrest…

TEHRAN - Five people have been sentenced to death and 81 have received jail terms of up to 15 years in connection with unrest which followed Iran's disputed June election, state broadcaster IRIB reported yesterday.

Citing a statement by the public relations office of Tehran's provincial court, it said those sentenced to death were affiliated to or were members of "counter-revolutionary groups". It said the verdicts can be appealed.

It was not immediately clear whether the five condemned were the same persons as those reported by an Iranian rights group earlier this week to have been sentenced to death. The IRIB report did not give names.

The presidential poll held more than five months ago triggered mass demonstrations by supporters of defeated pro-reform candidates, who say it was rigged to secure hardline President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's re-election.

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Iranian authorities have rejected the election fraud charges and portrayed the street demonstrations as foreign-backed efforts to undermine the Islamic Republic.

Thousands of people were arrested as the Revolutionary Guards and an Islamic militia quelled the protests during Iran's worst internal crisis since the 1979 Islamic revolution.

Most of those held have since been freed but more than 100 leading reformers, activists, journalists and others have been put on trial accused of fomenting the unrest. The opposition has denounced the trials. Several jail sentences have been announced.

"So far, verdicts have been issued on 89 of the cases, of whom five have been given the execution sentence because of their affiliation to or membership in counter-revolutionary groups," yesterday's court statement said.

Eighty-one people were sentenced to prison terms ranging from six months to 15 years. There were also three suspended jail sentences. "The verdicts issued here are not final and can be appealed," the statement said, adding the court issued it to "prevent the spread of baseless and unreal rumours regarding the manner of issuing of verdicts".

In October, Iranian news agency ISNA reported that three people had been sentenced to death on charges related to post-vote unrest and links to exiled opposition groups.

They were accused of affiliation to a pro-monarchy group and the People's Mujahideen Organisation of Iran (PMOI), which is an exiled opposition organisation, seen by both Iran and the United States as a terrorist group.

The UN high commissioner for human rights, Navi Pillay, last month urged Iran's appeal courts to review the three death sentences carefully.

The opposition says more than 70 people were killed in the post-election unrest. The authorities put the number of dead at about half that figure and say it includes members of the Islamic Basij militia. - (Reuters)