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The director Miri said 18 death row inmates -- some as young as 15 -- were interviewed to build the stage stories. He was inspired by a move by some judges to postpone carrying out the hangings for inmates once they reached 18 in hopes in persuading the victims' families to withdraw the punishment. Among the stories in production are two young girls sentenced to death for killing their father when they were 12 and 15. The persons holding the key to whether the sentences would be carried out were an uncle, aunt and grandmother. "I felt as if I was communicating the message of the play when I heard and saw the reactions from the audience," said Mina Karimi Jebeli, who played role of one of the young murderers. At a recent performance at the Arasbaran Cultural Center in north Tehran, some of the theatergoers sobbed. "It was very emotional," said Arezou Ziaei, 23. "I cannot believe that such people are waiting for death." Executions in Iran are increasingly carried out in prison gallows -- often with a chair or bench kicked out from under the inmate -- but public hangings still occur with the condemned prisoner hoisted up by a crane attached to the rope and noose. In the past, the age of criminal responsibility in Iran was defined by "maturity," which is 9 for girls and 15 for boys. Iran's parliament amended laws in 2011 to block death penalty sentences on anyone under 15 and give judges more leeway to impose substitute sentences on juveniles convicted of murder. While the number of juveniles sentenced to death in Iran is relatively small, rights group say it violates international treaties on treatment of young suspects. In January, a 21-year-old Iranian man was reportedly executed for his alleged role in a murder when he was 17 years old, activists groups say. In 2012, at least one of the more than 300 people executed in Iran was sentenced as a juvenile. Two other countries, Saudi Arabia and Sudan, are known to have executed someone in recent years for a crime committed before they were 18, according to New York-based Human Rights Watch. Last September, Ahmed Shaheed, the U.N. special rapporteur on Iran, urged Iranian authorities to abolish capital punishment in juvenile cases. Lawyer Nemat Ahmadi welcomed the performance as a chance to push lawmakers and authorities to contemplate further judicial reforms. "Such a play," he said, "is able to awake public opinion."
[Associated
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