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Artyom Gerasimov
Artyom Gerasimov

A court in Russian-annexed Crimea has sentenced a Jehovah's Witness to six years in prison for being a member of an extremist group.

The Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group, a Ukrainian organization, called the sentencing of Artyom Gerasimov on June 4 "a shocking escalation of repression in occupied Crimea."

Russia officially banned the Jehovah's Witnesses in April 2017 and deemed it an "extremist organization," despite widespread condemnation from Western countries and human rights groups.

The Supreme Court in Crimea ruled in an appeal on June 4 that Gerasimov should serve six years in a penal colony.

The sentence came after Gerasimov appealed a Yalta city court fining him 400,000 rubles ($5,785) in March, the Jehovah's Witnesses said in a statement.

The prosecutor's office then demanded 6 1/2 years of imprisonment.

"Today's ruling by the Crimean Supreme Court brings religious persecution to a new level of cruelty," Jehovah's Witnesses spokesman Jarrod Lopes said.

According to the group, Gerasimov is the second Jehovah's Witness to be sentenced in Crimea, and the 30th Jehovah's Witness convicted in Russia and Crimea since 2017. Ten have been imprisoned.

On March 5, a Crimean court found Sergei Filatov guilty of being a member of the religious group and sentenced him to six years in prison.

For decades the Jehovah's Witnesses have been viewed with suspicion in Russia, where the dominant Russian Orthodox Church is championed by President Vladimir Putin.

The Christian group is known for door-to-door preaching, close Bible study, rejection of military service, and not celebrating national and religious holidays or birthdays.

Authorities in annexed Crimea also persecute members of the Muslim organization Hizb ut-Tahrir, which was declared a terrorist group in Russia.

Dozens of people have been convicted for involvement in the group's activities. Neither Hizb ut-Tahrir nor the Jehovah's Witnesses are banned in Ukraine.

Crimea has been controlled by Moscow since March 2014, when Russia forcibly annexed the peninsula, sending in troops and staging a referendum denounced as illegitimate by at least 100 countries, after Moscow-friendly Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych was ousted amid a wave of public protests.

With reporting by RFE/RL's Russian Service, AFP, and Reuters
The death of Romina Ashrafi, who was reportedly beheaded by her father, has put a spotlight on the practice of honor killings in Iran.
The death of Romina Ashrafi, who was reportedly beheaded by her father, has put a spotlight on the practice of honor killings in Iran.

Romina was only 14 years old when she was reportedly beheaded by her father in a horrific case of a so-called "honor" killing that has shocked Iran.

Reza Ashrafi, her dad, reportedly failed to convince Romina's mother to force their daughter to commit suicide, so he decapitated her with a sickle as she slept at the family home.

The police had detained Romina and her boyfriend two days earlier after a five-day hunt and sent her back to her family, even though she expressed fears for her life in citing her father's bad temperament.

Reza Ashrafi confessed to the gruesome killing of his daughter while still holding the bloody tool, Iranian media reported.

The May 21 death of Romina in the northern Gilan Province put a spotlight on the all-too-common practice in Iran of "honor" killings, which are both underreported and often hushed up by officials.

Under current Islamic laws in Iran, Romina's father faces a prison sentence of up to 10 years if convicted. He is exempt from the "retribution" law -- meaning the death penalty -- since according to the Islamic Penal Code he was Romina's guardian.

Iranian media have reported that, before beheading his daughter, Ashrafi consulted a lawyer to find out what punishment he would face.

Nationwide Outrage

Romina's aunt said in an interview that Ashrafi, 37, claimed that through his act he had proven he's an honorable man. She added that Ashrafi -- who is in detention -- had been pressured by his brothers to kill Romina.

Twenty-nine-year old Bahman Khavari -- Romina's boyfriend -- was also reportedly detained last week on charges of kidnapping.

The shocking murder in the town of Hovigh led to nationwide outrage, but is just the latest case of such killings in Iran, which activists blame on patriarchal culture and traditions, discrimination, as well as laws that fail to protect women against violence and allow girls as young as 13 to be married.

"Women are [seen] as the property of men," Paris-based sociologist and author Chahla Chafiq said in a recent interview with the BBC.

There are no official statistics kept in Iran about honor killings, but according to academic articles and university-thesis estimates cited by the daily Ebtekar, every year between 375 and 450 such killings occur in Iran, in which mostly women are killed by their male relatives -- including their husbands, fathers, and brothers -- in the name of preserving the family's "honor."

Women have been killed for losing their virginity, bearing a child outside of marriage, infidelity, requesting a divorce, or even over unfounded rumors of being engaged in activity that would taint their family's status.

A police official said in 2014 that about 20 percent of all murders in Iran had been honor killings.

Tribal Traditions

A study published last year about the practice in the southern Khuzestan Province said that many of these killings go either unreported or they’re being reported as "disappearance, suicide, or suspicious deaths."

According to the study, honor killings are more prevalent in provinces with tribal traditions, including in Sistan-Baluchistan, Khuzestan, Kurdistan, and Ilam.

The Iranian media has reported on a number of such cases in recent years but none of them have grabbed as much attention as Romina’s, which made national headlines and prompted a call by President Hassan Rohani for the speedy adoption of legislation to more harshly prosecute honor killings.

Some of the more notorious cases in Iran in recent years include a woman identified as "Z" who was beaten to death by her brother while her uncle watched. The brother repeatedly banged his sister's head against a wall until she died.

The woman had been reportedly harassed by a neighbor and her family worried its "honor" had been damaged.

Another young woman was shot dead with a hunting gun by her father on a street in Khoy, in the West Azerbaijan Province, due to rumors she had dishonored the family.

'How Many More?'

The media also reported on the horrific death of a young woman named Golbahar in the southwestern province of Chaharmahal-Bakhtiari. Golbahar was reportedly set on fire by male relatives for bearing the child of a young neighbor. Her child was reportedly poisoned to death by the men.

Journalist and women’s rights activist Jila Baniyaghoob, who covered Golbahar's case, wrote that to escape prosecution the family claimed Golbahar had committed self-immolation and that her child had starved to death.

"How many Golbahars and Rominas have been killed in their paternal houses and how many more will be killed?" Baniyaghoob tweeted after Romina’s killing.

Shahindokht Molavderi, former Iranian vice president of women’s affairs who’s been outspoken on women’s rights, suggested that without the passing of relevant legislation and the raising of awareness, the cycle of violence against women is likely to continue.

"Romina is neither the first nor will she be the last victim of honor killings," Molaverdi said on Twitter.

"As long as the law, judicial procedure, and the culture that dominates local and global communities does not offer enough deterrence, they will serve this crime against humanity," she said while posting Romina’s funeral ceremony invitation, on which the teenager was described as "the dear daughter" of Reza Ashrafi.

Filmmaker Kianush Ayari -- whose movie Paternal House about an honor killing in Iran that reverberates through three generations but was banned last year over scenes deemed too violent -- reacted to Romina’s killing by calling for his film to finally be screened "for the sake of the people."

"If there hadn’t been an irrelevant opposition and they had allowed [my film] to be screened widely, maybe [Romina]’s father would have seen it and [it would have made him] think," Ayari said.

The Tehran chief prosecutor banned Ayari's film after claiming it promoted "violence against women" and questions "pure Iranian-Islamic traditions" while offering a "false image" of the Iranian family.

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"Watchdog" is a blog with a singular mission -- to monitor the latest developments concerning human rights, civil society, and press freedom. We'll pay particular attention to reports concerning countries in RFE/RL's broadcast region.

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