Her lawyer Parand Gharahdaghi wrote on Instagram that the original sum, equivalent to around €100,000 ($124,000), had been reduced to around €80,000 and raised through donations and charities.
Mizan’s report did not mention the blood money sum.
Mahmood Amiry-Moghaddam, director of Norway-based NGO Iran Human Rights, which sought to raise awareness of her plight, said “her case reflects the discrimination and structural violence experienced by many women in the Islamic republic who face the death penalty”.
According to IHR’s current toll, Iranian authorities have executed more than 40 women this year alone, many of them victims of poverty, child marriage and domestic violence.
“In court, no consideration was given to Goli’s age at the time of marriage, the history of domestic violence, or the fact that she had no access to a lawyer during her arrest and interrogation and was illiterate at the time,” said Amiry-Moghaddam.
According to IHR, she was arrested over the killing of her husband in May 2018, when she was 18, and sentenced to death with his cousin.
It said she had called her husband’s cousin for help when the husband had been beating her and her son. A fight then broke out in which the husband was killed.
IHR said that the cousin, Mohammad Abil, “remains on death row and at risk of execution”.
According to human rights groups, including Amnesty International, Iran is the world’s second most prolific executioner after China.
-Agence France-Presse