<p>Iranian courts have sentenced three people to be blinded in one eye under the Islamic republic's retribution laws, a newspaper reported Tuesday.</p>.<p>Hamshahri, the Tehran municipality's daily, said a woman was among the three sentenced to the eye-for-an-eye punishment.</p>.<p>She had hurled acid at another woman in a 2011 dispute, causing her to lose an eye, it said.</p>.<p>Hamshahri said the supreme court has upheld the sentence of having her right eye gouged out, on top of a jail term and a fine.</p>.<p>A man has been handed down the same punishment for causing his victim to lose an eye in a knife assault in 2017.</p>.<p>In a third case, dating back to 2018, a man has been convicted for blinding a friend in the left eye with a hunting weapon. Hamshahri said the plaintiff has "insisted" that his assailant suffer the same fate.</p>.<p>The three cases have been transferred to the Tehran prosecutor's office to prepare for the sentences to be carried out.</p>.<p>Iran applies the eye-for-an-eye law at the request of victims or their families, unless they grant a pardon.</p>.<p>Amnesty International and other rights groups condemn such punishment in Iran as cruel and tantamount to torture.</p>
<p>Iranian courts have sentenced three people to be blinded in one eye under the Islamic republic's retribution laws, a newspaper reported Tuesday.</p>.<p>Hamshahri, the Tehran municipality's daily, said a woman was among the three sentenced to the eye-for-an-eye punishment.</p>.<p>She had hurled acid at another woman in a 2011 dispute, causing her to lose an eye, it said.</p>.<p>Hamshahri said the supreme court has upheld the sentence of having her right eye gouged out, on top of a jail term and a fine.</p>.<p>A man has been handed down the same punishment for causing his victim to lose an eye in a knife assault in 2017.</p>.<p>In a third case, dating back to 2018, a man has been convicted for blinding a friend in the left eye with a hunting weapon. Hamshahri said the plaintiff has "insisted" that his assailant suffer the same fate.</p>.<p>The three cases have been transferred to the Tehran prosecutor's office to prepare for the sentences to be carried out.</p>.<p>Iran applies the eye-for-an-eye law at the request of victims or their families, unless they grant a pardon.</p>.<p>Amnesty International and other rights groups condemn such punishment in Iran as cruel and tantamount to torture.</p>