Public hangings and floggings are rare in Tehran
-- but then, so were the brutal crimes of Ali Reza Khoshruy Kuran
Kordiyeh.
In an unusual breach of policy, Iranian authorities,
apparently seeking to assure a terrified public that the spate of
murders had ended, leaked the time and venue of Kordiyeh's execution to
the press.
The crowds began to swell at midnight, and by dawn
the life and crimes of the serial killer came to an end to the cheers
and wails of some 10,000 onlookers.
But for some, the final, brutal hours of Ali Reza
Khoshruy Kuran Kordiyeh weren't punishment enough.
"I'm still not satisfied with the punishment this
killer is getting for killing my daughter,'' sobbed Nasser Parchami,
father of 25-year-old Parvand.
The killer had been brought, handcuffed, in an
unmarked police car -- an old Volkswagen -- to a construction storage
site in the western Tehran neighborhood where he had cruised for the
fares who became his victims.
"Do you see finally that God is greater, you son of a
dog?'' a man shouted.
"He is not a human,'' said Marzieh Davani, a 38-year-old
woman.
"I really cannot understand a human can do what he
did. He deserves to die surrounded by the hatred of people,'' said Amir
Ezati, who had taken his place in the crowd at 3 a.m.
About 1,000 riot policemen kept guard. Hundreds of
people had shinnied up and electricity poles and clung on to get a
better view.
Kordiyeh was tied to a metal bed set up on the roof
of a small brick shed, and whipped by one male relative of each of his
victims wielding a thick leather belt, in full view of the spectators.
He had also been whipped by prison officials on
Monday and Tuesday as part of his 214-lash sentence.
"Damn you, you killer,'' somebody shouted. The chant
was taken up by the others as Kordiyeh, wearing a dark green prison
uniform and staring ahead impassively, was led underneath the crane
where a noose was tightened around his neck.
As the crane smoothly lifted Kordiyeh high up in the
air, his legs kicked. Then he became still.
"I borrowed money from no one, and I owe none to
anyone. I ask God for forgiveness for what I did,'' were Kordiyeh's last
words before he was hanged, a judicial official said.
Kordiyeh, 28, called the ``Tehran Vampire'' because
he operated at night and stalked his victims, was sentenced to death --
nine times over -- earlier this month after he was convicted of killing
nine women, including a mother and her 10-year-old daughter.
To hide his crimes during the spree, which began in
March, Kordiyeh burned the bodies. Some were not destroyed completely
and police found up to 30 stab wounds on them.
His trial was broadcast live to fascinated Iranians
by state-run television, but cameras were barred from the hanging.
He was caught by chance.
Picked up for suspicious behavior at a mall, he was
identified through a police sketch provided by two women who had escaped
him. Faced with evidence, including blood stains on his car, Kordiyeh
confessed but provided no motive for his acts.