The perpetrators of the unrest should be executed within 5 to 10 days.

Mustafa Mirsalim, the head of the Central Council of the Islamic Coalition Party, made a strange comment last week: “The perpetrators of the unrest should be executed within 5 to 10 days.”
A man who, just a few months ago (July), was recounting to the media with a distraught face the story of his son's arrest and imprisonment on security charges (collaboration with the People's Mojahedin Organization), and spoke very helplessly about his son's physical and mental problems, and of course, about being deceived, is today talking about the very long gap between the arrest of the perpetrators of the unrest and their execution.
According to Fararoo, Seyyed Mustafa Mirsalim announced his demand that those arrested in the unrest should be executed within 5 or 10 days of their arrest.
It seems that the Minister of Guidance of Hashemi Rafsanjani's second government and the official candidate of the coalition party in the 2017 presidential elections, has forgotten that he must first stick a needle in himself and then a needle in others! It seems that he is so immersed in the atmosphere of unrest in the country that he is calling for the execution of others faster than any legal proceedings; but he says about his own son: He was just fooled. These same hypocrites fooled him! Mirsalim had said to his son: In my opinion, prison is not an appropriate punishment for a person with such weak conditions, but apparently for other people's children the situation is 180 degrees different (death is good for the neighbor).
That others should be executed immediately, but your child was just fooled, reminds us of the story of a cleric who said from the pulpit: "If a child vandalizes the carpet at home, that piece of carpet should be cut up. When he came home, he saw that his wife had cut up a piece of the carpet! He was very upset and shouted at his wife. His wife said: Why are you shouting? You said it yourself! The cleric looked at his wife and child and said: I said this for the people, not for ourselves!!"
This story is a common one among Iranian government officials. Employees in various departments readily comment on taking people's lives or even suggest to some people that they should open fire on protesting people.
Mr. Mirsalim! In your opinion:
What is the verdict of the person who ordered the destruction of the Ukrainian plane?
What is the ruling on a person who rapes children under the pretext of teaching them the Quran?
What is the verdict of the person who orders the extermination of 1,700 dogs?
Who will answer the tears of the families whose loved ones were taken with these sentences?
Who will answer the cries of Gohar Eshghi (Sattar Beheshti's mother)?
What is the sentence for the person who shot and killed Neda Agha-Soltan on the street in 2009?
Whenever you can answer just these 6 questions, you have the right to comment on the youth of this land. You don't even consider imprisonment appropriate for your child, but you demand the death penalty for the women and men of this land who demand freedom?
We also agree with Parviz Parastoi:
Thank God you are not the head of the judiciary, because if you had such a position, you would have executed half of today's youth in Iran by now.
You and your kind must definitely be held accountable for the blood shed by every young person in this country.
The Word of God says:
Therefore you are inexcusable, O man, whoever you are, because in whatever you judge another, you condemn yourself; for you who judge, do the same things. (Romans 2:1)




