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Children on death row need your help
Iranian children facing executions, their families and attorneys need their voices to be heard and you can make the difference in their lives by devoting only a few minutes of your time.
If you have good knowledge of both Persian and English please send us an email at
info@stopchildexecutions.comThank You for caring
Stop Child Executions Campaign
A song dedicated to ATEFEH

Last year I saw a BBC documentary about a young Iranian girl named Atefah. Atefah was arrested by the Iranian “moral police”and tried and eventually hanged, she was 16 years old. I was so moved by this that I had to write the song “Atefah” you can listen to the song on my myspace page at : http://www.myspace.com/joemonaghan
This led me to find out that many Iranian children are executed each year. It is a problem that needs the worlds attention. You can find more about this by going to: www.stopchildexecutions.com
Peace and Love
Joe.
کنفرانس دانش آموزان هامبورگ عليه اعدام نوجوانان
به دعوت مدرسه كوروی در هامبورگ روز ٨ نوامبر مراسمی علیه اعدام در ایران و برای نجات سینا پایمرد برگزار شد. سینا پسر ٢١ ساله ای است كه از سن ١٧ سالگی به اعدام محكوم شده است. حکم اعدام او هفته گذشته لغوشد. ولي سينا هنوز در زندان است.
تعدادی از شاگردان مدرسه كوروی از ماه ژوئیه ٢۰۰۷ پیگیرانه برای نجات سینا پایمرد در تلاشند. آنها چند ماه پیش گزارشی از مارتین ابینگ یك خبرنگار
آلمانی كه در ایران بسر میبرد در مورد حكم اعدام سینا و كلا اعدام نوجوانان را در روزنامه برلینر سایتونگ خوانده و از آن موقع به بعد مصرانه برای آزادی سینا تلاش میكنند.
دانش آموزان با كمك معلمشان و حمایت مدیر مدرسه در پی تظاهراتهای متعدد و نوشتن نامه های مختلف به مراجع دولتی از جمله صدر اعظم آلمان پنجشنبه شب مراسمی را با حضور والدین شاگردان مدرسه و افراد دیگر برگزار كردند. در ابتدا یكی از شاگردان گزارش جامعی از فعالیتهایشان داد و با نشان دادن عكسهایی از اعدام ها در ایران و همچنین شرح سرگذشت سینا حاضرین را در این مراسم تحت تاثیر قرار دادند.
سخنرانان این مراسم ٥ نفر از دانش آموزان٬ نازنین برومند از طرف كمیته علیه اعدام٬ مسعود بهرازنیا به عنوان وكیل و آقای زینكنشت از طرف امنستی بودند.
همه سخنرانان این اقدام دانش آموزان را اقدامی نادر و بسیار قابل تحسین و نمونه ارزیابی كردند. دانش آموزان نیز در انتهای مراسم اعلام كردند كه كار آنها هنوز پایان نیافته است و آنها همچنان برای نجات سینا و علیه حكم اعدام تلاش خواهند كرد.
این نمونه ای از بی مرز بودن انسانیت و حقوق انسانی و همبستگی بین المللی است كه باید نمونه ای برای همه انسانها باشد.
دانش آموزان ٢٨ نوامبر تظاهرات دیگری را در مقابل كنسولگری جمهوری اسلامی در هامبورگ تدارك دیده اند.
در این مراسم حدودا ٧٠ تا ٨٠ نفر شركت داشتند.
Stop Child Executions NOW
Who is who at Stop Child Executions Campaign?
Here are the team of SCE volunteers who campaign to Stop Child Executions worldwide:
Nazanin Afshin-Jam | Canada (co -founder, outreach, writer, spokesperson) |
David Etebari | USA (co-founder , Campaign coordinator, Research, Translation, Writer) |
Kristian | Norway (web & email Management) |
Donna Greene | Australia (Art/Design/web) |
D.W. Duke | USA (Writer – Lawyer – Research – SCE disussion forum ) |
Melanie Needham | Canada (SCE myspace site – Art) |
Dave Rea | USA (care2.com site ) |
Lucy Biltz | USA (mySpace Delara Darabi page, SCE Newsletter) |
Mojgan | USA (iranian.com blog) |
There are also 100’s of supporters and organizations worldwide, without whom this campaign would not have been possible.
More determined than ever Nazanin Afshin-Jam continues the campaign

Despite being very ill with flu , Nazanin has been busy campaigning this month and is expected to continue her non-stop efforts throughout 2007. In her myspace blog, Nazanin Afshin-Jam wrote:
“Today I was interviewed by the Legendary Sir David Frost on his show “Frost all over the World” for Al Jazeera network. I wanted to give him a big hug and congratulate him for a lifelong series of success and dedicated work in Journalism BUT…I was so sick… with sniffles… that I didn’t even attempt to shake the man’s hand. He was very courteous and I asked him if I could add his name to the Stop Child Executions petition and he said “Of course!”.
I have had a series of interviews since I have been in London in the last couple of days including BBC World Update and BBC Asian. Tomorrow I have meetings with Amnesty International head office to discuss some of the more imminent cases of child executions. It has been a successful week of press promoting the campaign. When I was in New York a few days ago, I appeared on Fox’s Hannity and Comes, RedEye, Jamnow.com. I also attended Glamour’s Women of the Year Award. It was so inspirational listening to the courage of some pretty extraordinary women. “
Following last month’s Stella Magazine’s 3 page spread in the Telegraph times, this month Bella magazine in UK will also feature Nazanin and SCE Campaign. Vanity Fair Germany and Flare Magazine are also expected to publish articles about Nazanin and SCE in December. Nazanin is also anticipated to visit the new Canadian Minister of Foreign Affairs and other Canadian Parliament members to emphasize Stop Child Executions Campaign and its goals. Nazanin Afshin Jam will also be attending a dinner function with Madeline Albright and Iranian dissident Akbar Ganji.
The students of the McGill University and Kwantlan college in Vancouver will also be hearing Nazanin speak in their campuses. She is expected to be back in London at the end of the November to speak at a large Journalism Awards dinner with all the top Journalists present. On her way back to Canada she also stop in Washington DC for another interview by the Voice of America Persian.
Banners for SCE Christmas fund raising campaign
Nazanin and SCE in UK's Daily Telegraph
” What Women in Iran have to put up with is so much worse. If they won’t be silenced, then I won’t be silenced.”
Nazanin Afshin-Jam
This week an article about Nazanin Afshin-Jam and the Stop Child Executions Campaign was featured on the Daily Telegraph in UK . Here are some selected parts:

Even now, she says, smiling ruefully, her sister chides her not to take life so seriously. ‘Every once in a while I end up in a club for a friend’s stagette [hen night] or something, and I sit back and watch all these people and sometimes I wish I could have that fun. They are not thinking about everything; they are just living. But then I remember all the awful things in this world and how much I have got to do.’
“If I’d been an architect, I could have used my blessings to create an orphanage. My beauty meant I was able to bring attention to a cause. It’s calculated so that people get the message about human rights. You’ve got to be within the system to beat the system.”
Afshin-Jam’s most notable achievement to date is to have been instrumental in saving the life of her namesake, Nazanin Fatehi, an Iranian woman nine years her junior. In 2005, aged 17, Fatehi was walking in a park in Teheran when three men tried to rape her. Fighting back, she stabbed one of the men in the chest and killed him. She was sentenced to death for murder.
Human-rights activists adopted her cause for two reasons: one, because Fatehi had acted in self-defence; two, because Iran is a signatory to a UN charter that forbids passing the death penalty on anyone under the age of 18, an agreement it has often violated. The campaign made little headway, however, until Afshin-Jam became involved, after a French activist, who had Googled the name Nazanin, came across the beauty queen’s website.
He emailed asking for her help and, after some initial inquiries, she headed a ‘Help Nazanin’ campaign, posting a petition on her website. It quickly received more than 350,000 signatures. Afshin-Jam also worked with Amnesty International to secure a good lawyer for Fatehi in Iran and travelled extensively to lobby for diplomatic intervention.
Four months after Afshin-Jam received the original email, Fatehi was given a stay of execution. After a retrial in January this year she was exonerated of all murder charges and released. ‘I was so totally immersed in the campaign – every cell in my body, my brain, my heart. Maybe it was too much,’ she says. ‘I couldn’t rest. I’d wake up and immediately pick up my computer and start reading my emails.
‘ My family would say, “Have you eaten breakfast?” and I’d think, “Oh, yeah, I should get up and take a shower. It’s three o’clock.” I just lost myself.’ The women spoke minutes after Fatehi’s release and now talk frequently on the phone. ‘We laugh and talk about things. She’s sweet, quite quiet with a gentle voice. We’re trying to get her to Canada, either permanently or for a visit.’
In the wake of this success Afshin-Jam went on to found the Stop Child Executions campaign, working to save the other 80 minors on death row in Iran. She has, she says, been approached by several Canadian political parties to be a candidate but prefers to stay independent and campaign through her music.
Having jammed for several years with her brother-in-law, a professional musician, the pair wrote a few songs that made the basis of the album, whose title track, Someday, is a protest song attacking the ayatollahs. Her latest single, On Christmas Day, will be available as a download and all profits will go to Stop Child Executions.
Despite her passion for all things Iranian, her outspokenness makes it impossible to return. She has received death threats from fundamentalists. ‘It’s a bit scary at times,’ she says levelly. ‘Especially when someone says, “I’m going to slash a knife across your face and you’ll see where your career’s going to go.” ‘When I’m doing speeches I always look at the audience to see if there’s anyone suspicious. But what women in Iran have to put up with is so much worse. If they won’t be silenced, then I won’t be silenced.’ The single ‘On Christmas Day’ (Bodog Music), by Nazanin, is available on stopchildexecutions.com
Delara Darabi and Soghra Najafpour updates
To read more about Delara Darabi and Soghra Najafpour visit: https://www.stopchildexecutions.com/the_row.aspx