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IRAN
Exploring alternatives to youth
custody
Iran and Britain shared ideas on youth sentencing at a
United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) workshop in Tehran this month.
Representatives from Iran's judiciary, police, social workers and
academics met David Padley, a British police inspector and policy
advisor to the Youth Justice Board of England and Wales, to discuss ways
in which Iran might reduce its youth custody rates.
“One of the general objectives of the workshop has been to discuss how
to effectively deal with young people in a community-based setting
rather than imprisoning them,” said David Padley. “There's been a
sharing of areas of common interest. We've been looking at alternatives
to prison custody, prevention of and multi-disciplinary responses to
youth crime,” he said.
Padley said that Iran and Britain both have concerns about youth crime.
Iran is now developing rehabilitation programmes for youth offenders as
an alternative to custody. Iran is one of only six countries known to
have executed juvenile offenders over the past 15 years.
“There is an interest in alternative sentencing for young people and in
reviewing the system.” said Jan-Pieter Kleijburg, UNICEF's programme
officer in Tehran. “This is good, as it means an increase in juvenile
courts and correction centres and it promotes community and social work.
You are not helping children by locking them up with common criminals.”
According to Padley, the Iranian judiciary showed
interest in his examples of community-based interventions instead of
custodial sentences. During the workshop, a variety of issues were
discussed such as extending the powers of the judiciary to impose
community-based sentences and a greater role for the police in
monitoring child offenders in the community rather than sending them to
court.
Padley listed British examples of community sentencing which included
ordering the child to attend school by law and 'reparation.' Reparation
is when the offender is ordered to carry out a community service or
directly makes amends with the victim of the crime.
The workshop also tackled issues related to child sexual abuse, with an
emphasis on identifying, investigating and protecting victims. Child
sexual abuse is rarely reported in Iran and sharia law demands that
there be four witnesses to a girl's claims of abuse, making it difficult
to prove in a court of law.
“The mere fact that there are judges, police officers
and social workers in the same room is a golden opportunity to
understand the problems each of them face and to hear differing points
of view,” said Mohammad Fayyazi, UNICEF Assistant Project Officer, Child
Protection.
Tehran is one of only a few cities in Iran that has a youth prison.
According to Parvaneh Ghasemian, a social activist and volunteer worker
at Tehran's juvenile jail, 300 boys and 40 girls are incarcerated there,
all under the age of 18. Although the average age of inmates is 14 years
of age, there are some children as young as six.
“Children from poorer backgrounds who cannot afford court fees are
imprisoned for petty offences such as shoplifting, wearing too much
make-up or mixing with the opposite sex. What they (the children) need
is a good education and they need more freedom — if they had this, we
wouldn't even need a prison,” said Ghasemian.
19 July 2005
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=48185&SelectRegion=Asia&SelectCountry=IRAN
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