INTERNATIONAL PERSECUTION REPORTS
Iran Detains Ex-Muslims
for ‘Apostasy’
Police interrogate
converts to Christianity
about faith, political
activity.
By Peter Lamprecht
ISTANBUL,
Iranian
authorities have
detained two converts to
Christianity in the
southern city of Shiraz
for eight weeks on
suspicion of “apostasy,”
or leaving Islam. In
Iran, apostasy is a
crime that can be
punishable by death.
Mahmood Matin, 52, and
Arash Bandari, 44,
remain imprisoned in a
secret police detention
center known by its
address, Sepah Street
100, located in the
center of Shiraz since
their arrest on May 15
(previously reported as
May 13).
A draft penal code under
discussion in Iran’s
parliament this month
may make the death
penalty obligatory for
those who leave Islam or
use the Internet to
encourage others to do
so (see sidebar below)
During a visit on June
24, Matin’s wife was
able to speak with him
for five minutes as
officials listened in, a
source told Compass.
Seated in a dimly lit
room behind a glass
window, the prisoner
told his wife that there
had been a
misunderstanding and
that he could not teach
Christianity any more.
“They are pushing me to
tell them that I am
connected to a church
outside [Iran] and that
I am receiving a salary,
but I told them that I
am doing it on my own,”
he told his wife,
according to a source
who requested anonymity
for security reasons.
Despite Matin’s claims
that he was being well
treated, his wife told
the source she believed
otherwise.
“He was just trying to
make me calm; that’s
what I could see because
he’s my husband and I
know his face,” Matin’s
wife said, according to
the source. The source
said that Matin was not
even aware where he was
being held until his
wife told him during the
visit.
The June 24 meeting was
the first and only
face-to-face contact
Matin’s family has had
with him since his
arrest in May.
Matin and Bandari were
detained with 13 other
Muslim converts to
Christianity while
meeting together in a
park in Shiraz. Police
confiscated the group’s
cell phones and
“temporarily” released
everyone except Matin
and Bandari over the
subsequent days.
According to the source,
the 13 have been told
they have an ongoing
court case against them.
They remain under house
arrest and have been
called in for
questioning about
alleged political
activity and Christian
faith.
Officials have not
informed the 13 released
Christians of the
specific charges against
them. But the nature of
their questioning has
led them to believe that
they are suspected of
apostasy and political
crimes against the
government.
Matin telephoned his
wife several weeks after
his arrest to tell her
that he had been charged
with apostasy and to
request that she acquire
a lawyer to take his
case. But on June 22,
she received a call from
an official telling her
that Matin did not need
legal representation and
inviting her to visit
her husband in Shiraz.
“The caller did not say
who they were, just that
they were from the
secret police and that
the family could visit Matin
on June 24 between 9
a.m. and 2 p.m.,” the
source said. He said
that Matin’s wife
traveled 17 hours by bus
from her home in Tehran
to visit her jailed
husband.
Matin has had no further
contact with his wife
and three children, ages
22, 18 and 12, since the
June 24 jail visit.
Mandatory Death for
‘Apostates’ Debated in
Parliament
ISTANBUL,
A penal
code that would mandate
the death penalty for
those who promote
corruption, prostitution
and apostasy even on the
Internet is expected to
go to debate soon in
Iran’s parliament.
If passed, the penal
code drafted last
January would require
execution of any Muslim
who converts to
Christianity. Under
sharia (Islamic)
law, apostasy is one of
several “crimes” that
can be punishable by
death, although Islamic
court judges are not
required to hand down
such a sentence.
The draft of the penal
code under consideration
explicitly sets death as
a fixed punishment that
cannot be changed,
reduced or annulled.
Many believe that the
government intends to
use the proposed penal
code to clamp down on
the surge in conversions
in Iran over the last
few years. Commentators
have called the surge a
“mass exodus” from
Islam, which in its
Iranian Shiite version
imposes harsh
limitations on lifestyle
and personal freedoms.
On July 2 Iran’s Members
of Parliament voted to
discuss as a priority
the draft bill that
seeks to “toughen
punishment for harming
mental security in
society,” Agence France-Presse
(AFP) reported last
week. The news agency
noted that the draft
bill also includes the
death penalty for
“establishing weblogs
and sites promoting
corruption, prostitution
and apostasy.”
According to the current
penal code, the death
sentence is already
applicable to rape,
adultery and armed
robbery, among other
crimes. The draft adds
apostasy and
cyber-crimes to the list
and stipulates that
those convicted of these
crimes should be
punished as “mohareb”
(enemy of God) and
“corrupt on the earth,”
according to AFP.
Over the last few years,
the Internet and media
such as television have
been conduits of
information on
Christianity and are
feared as sources of
“corruption” of the
Iranian people. The
Internet is widely used
in Iran despite
restricted access for
thousands of websites
with “immoral” content
or content – including
Christian ones – deemed
as insulting religion
and promoting political
dissent.
The number of executions
in Iran reached 317 last
year, up from 177
recorded by Amnesty
International in 2006.
Human rights
organizations have
criticized Iran for
making excessive use of
the death penalty, but
Tehran insists it is an
effective deterrent that
is carried out only
after an exhaustive
judicial process,
reported the AFP.
In a statement earlier
this year, the European
Union (EU) criticized
the penal code draft and
particularly Section
Five on the death
penalty for apostasy.
The EU
said this section and
other parts of the code
violated Tehran’s
commitments under
international human
rights conventions.
Christians in particular
have suffered
persecution in Iran
since the Islamic
revolution in 1979. No
converts to Christianity
have been convicted of
“apostasy” since
international pressure
forced officials to drop
the death sentence of
Christian convert Mehdi
Dibaj in 1994. But in
the years following the
convert’s release, Dibaj
and four other
Protestant pastors,
including converts and
those working with
converts, have been
brutally murdered.
The murderers of the
Christians have never
been brought to justice,
and local believers
suspect the government
played a role in the
killings.
Christian converts are
regularly arrested and
imprisoned without due
process, tortured and
placed under
surveillance. Muslims
who have embraced
Christianity have no
right to practice their
newfound faith, and the
printing of the Bible in
Farsi, the national
language, has been
banned.
Provided by
Compass Direct News