Wednesday, February 15, 2017

THE PSYCHOSIS OF SADISM 'PSYCHOSADISM' - THE MENTAL DISORDER OF THE MIDDLE EAST




THE PSYCHOSIS OF SADISM

'PSYCHOSADISM'


THE MENTAL DISORDER OF THE MIDDLE EAST



Stes de Necker









A group of psycho-sadistic onlookers 
laughing and enjoying the spectacle
void of any feelings or remorse 


Broadly speaking, psychosis means a loss of contact with reality, while sadism is the enjoyment of the suffering of others. Both psychosis and sadism are symptoms of mental illness rather than medical conditions in their own right.  
  
A sadist is the kind of character that takes pleasure in inflicting cold-blooded torture and psychological abuse on others. Whether it's physical or psychological, a sadist will take pleasure in making or seeing others suffer. The sadist normally has a lack of empathy that stops that from feeling any guilt or remorse for the suffering they cause.

This ‘sadistic-psychoses’ is what we are witnessing daily taking place in the Middle East particularly in the Mullah regime in Iran.

This clerical regime in Iran has become emotional vampires who like to experience terror by instilling it in others targeting innocent people as substitutes for the true subject of their wrath.

The religious dictatorship ruling Iran uses executions methods in the most barbaric way, such as public hangings and stoning alongside other cruel measures, including amputating hands and feet, or even gouging out eyes, to create a climate of fear and terror across the Iranian society, to utterly quell all voices of dissent which is the true subject of their wrath.

During the past week (8 February to 15 February 2017):

Ø  In the early morning hours of Wednesday, the Iranian regime collectively hanged 12 prisoners in Gohardasht prison, western Tehran.

Ø  An Afghan, residing in Iran, was tried and sentenced to death in absentia after five years.
“The accused individual has fled since the very first day, and there is no evidence to charge him with the crime. He is sentenced to death in absentia however no crime has been proven against him.” a court-appointed lawyer said.

Ø  The 5th Branch of Tehran’s criminal court sentenced three inmates’ hands to be amputated for theft. The three were sentenced to have their hands amputated in a trial session held in the 5th branch. Following the ruling, the court judges consulted and convicted all three defendants to have their hands amputated, returning the stolen property and five years behind bars.

Ø  Eight young women were arrested on 14 February following a football game between two popular teams at the stadium competitions were held. Iranian women are banned entering stadiums under the laws of the Iranian regime, and this came after the 1979 Islamic revolution in Iran as mixed crowds enjoying games was deemed un-Islamic. Most clerics, strongly object to free mixing between men and women. Gender segregation falls under Islamic jurisprudence and insists on separation of men and boys from women and girls in social settings.

Ø  Two young prisoners were executed by hanging early morning on Sunday 13 February after they both were found guilty of murder. One arrested 11 years ago for a crime committed while he was teenager, and the other one was a 30 year-old man who had been imprisoned for the past 11 years. The execution was carried out with the presence of officials in Central Prison of Mashhad, northeast of Iran.

Ø  Three inmates in Zabol Central Prison, southeastern Iran, and seven others in Langrood prison of Qom, central Iran, were hanged on Monday 14 February , based on drug-related charges. The prosecutor of Qom was appointed recently in an attempt to frighten people through executions.

These are only the atrocities that we know of. One can safely assume that many more atrocities took place elsewhere in Iran during this period.

The United Nations General Assembly in December 2016 condemned the Iranian regime for the 63rd time for its gross human rights violations while Amnesty International has expressed its abhorrence of these brutal executions on numerous occasions.   

Resorting to this wave of executions, under any excuse, - either a so-called divine ruling of God, or the law and sharia approved by the dictatorial Iranian regime’s parliament - is nothing but legitimized murder and criminal genocide of the Iranian people.   

The STES DE NECKER FOUNDATION and FAAVM (Federal Association for the Advancement of Visible Minorities) of  Canada, strongly condemn these blatant atrocities and demand once again that the perpetrators of these crimes be placed before justice. They should never enjoy any immunity of whatever nature, but be prosecuted to the full extent of the law.

On behalf of the international community we once again demand the following measures to be taken immediately:

1. Immediate practical and serious global measures, especially by European Union member states, the U.S. and U.N. Security Council members to stop all arbitrary executions in Iran

2. The Iranian regime must be compelled to cancel all death sentences. Reports indicate hundreds of men and women in Iran are currently on death row. This waiting period is significantly harsher and more torturous than actually being executed.

3. Stoning, amputation of limbs, blinding of people’s eyes with acid, lashing, and all of these most atrocious punishments, must be acknowledged as crime against humanity, and its practice brought to an end in Iran.

4. All perpetrators of these crimes must be brought before the International Criminal Court on charges of crimes against humanity and be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law.







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