In May, The Sun obtained classified records which revealed that Iran had sentenced 51 people to death by stoning for adultery, including 23 women.
Iran’s penal code specifically lays out that “the size of the stone used in stoning shall not be too large to kill the convict by one or two throws and at the same time shall not be too small to be called a stone”, added the paper.
Stoning has also made a resurgence in Afghanistan under Taliban rule. Earlier this year, reports suggested that a man and a woman had been stoned to death at a sharia court for having sexual relations outside of marriage.
In 2015, disturbing footage of a 19-year-old woman being stoned to death in a Taliban-controlled village went viral. The woman “had been forced to marry against her will” and had fled with another man before being caught and sentenced to stoning for adultery, said CNN.
Stoning is used in several northern states in Nigeria “to punish residents for crimes ranging from adultery to blasphemy”, said Reuters. Last month, an Islamic sharia court in Bauchi sentenced three men to death by stoning after charging them with engaging in homosexuality.
Several women in Nigeria have been sentenced to death by stoning but been let off, including Hajara Ibrahim, who was just 18 when she was convicted of adultery and sentenced to stoning in 2004. Her lawyer had argued that the ruling “was invalid because Hajara had not consummated her marriage before sleeping with her boyfriend and conceiving a child”, said Al Jazeera.
In recent years, members of Somalia’s Islamist group al-Shabaab have sought to bring back stoning as a punishment for violating sharia law. In 2017, a 30-year-old mother of eight was publicly stoned to death for cheating on her husband.
“Her legal husband brought the case to the court. She admitted she illegally married a second husband,” al-Shabaab’s governor for Somalia’s Jubba regions in the south told Reuters. “According to the Islamic sharia she was publicly stoned to death this afternoon.”
In 2019, five years after the country introduced sharia law, Brunei introduced strict new Islamic laws which made anal sex and adultery offences punishable by stoning to death.
The move “sparked international condemnation”, said the BBC. George Clooney, Ellen DeGeneres and other A-listers called for a boycott of the luxury hotels owned by the Brunei Investment Agency in response.
According to a report by Human Rights Without Frontiers International in 2012, several women have been sentenced to death by stoning in Pakistan, but none of the stonings have actually been carried out. The report added that cases of extrajudicial stoning have occurred “most commonly in areas under Taliban influence or rule on the border of Afghanistan”.
Earlier this year a mentally ill man was stoned to death by “an angry mob” in Punjab province after it was alleged that the victim had “burned some pages of the Qur’an”, said The Guardian.
Stoning has also occurred in Mali, where a couple who had sex outside marriage were stoned to death in 2012, and the United Arab Emirates, where several women have been sentenced to death by stoning after being accused of adultery.
It is a legal punishment in Qatar and Yemen, although it is believed that such sentences haven’t actually been used there.
Article source: https://www.theweek.co.uk/news/crime/957354/the-countries-where-men-women-can-be-stoned-to-death