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HRW: Iran's rights record is 'scary'

NEW YORK, June 29 (UPI) -- Human Rights Watch described a death sentence in Iran for the consumption of alcohol as a "scary" symbol of the country's human rights legacy.

Two Iranians were given the death penalty early this week for a third-strike offense for drinking alcoholic beverages.

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Sarah Leah Whitson, director of the Middle East program at Human Rights Watch, said Iranian courts are harassing Iranians.

"Sentencing Iranians to death for consuming alcohol is a scary signal of how little Iran's judges value Iranian lives and how casually they can make a decision to end them," she said in a statement from New York.

The rights group states that Iranian law views consumption of alcohol as a violation of Shariah law. A first offense is punishable by 80 lashes though a third offense carries the death penalty.

Iran is suspected of carrying out more than 100 executions this year. The majority of the sentences were handed down for drug-related offenses.

U.N. officials this week criticized Iran for its judicious use of capital punishment. The death penalty, they said, should only be considered for "the most serious crimes."

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"Iran's courts apparently have nothing better to do than harass and even kill Iranians for engaging in dubious 'crimes'," said Whitson.

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