An Eye for an Eye:
The Incredible Story of Ameneh Bahrami
Attack:
After Bahrami rejected the romantic advances of Movahedi, a fellow student at the University of Tehran, he threw a bucket of acid in her face in October 2004. She subsequently underwent 17 surgeries, some in Spain, but remains badly disfigured and blind in both eyes.
The Iranian government has paid £22,500 towards her treatment.
Trial and response:
Bahrami testified against Movahedi at his trial. She informed the court that she desired "to inflict the same life on him that he inflicted on me". She requested that twenty drops of acid be dropped in his eyes.
Tehran's deputy public prosecutor, Mahmoud Salarkia, defended the punishment. "If this sentence is properly publicized in the media, it will stop the repetition of such incidents," he said. "Awareness of the punishment has a huge deterrent effect in stopping social crimes."However, human rights advocates strongly criticized the punishment.
The punishment was due to be carried out on April 15, 2009, Movahedi's appeal was rejected by the court, although the blinding did not take place that year. A new punishment date of May 14, 2011 was revealed, but again the punishment was not carried out, and was postponed indefinitely. On July 31, 2011, Ameneh forgave and pardoned her attacker, stating that she did so for her country.
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References:
Wikipedia:
http://en.wikipedia.org/
Ameneh Bahrami before the attack:
http://yogamodern.com/
Photo of the attacker 'Majid Movahedi':
http://
The Full Story:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/
http://www.guardian.co.uk/
Source of Image:http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/
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