INTERNATIONAL
Tortured Christian Flees
Iran
‘I have no doubt they
wanted to kill me,’ says
former Muslim.
By Barbara G. Baker
ANKARA,
Days after his release
from a month of
interrogations and
severe torture under
secret police custody,
Iranian Christian Mohsen
Namvar has fled across
the border into Turkey
with his family.
Traveling by train, the
badly beaten Christian
arrived July 2 in
eastern Turkey with his
wife and son.
Namvar, 44, had been
held incommunicado by a
branch of
Sepah (the
Iranian Revolutionary
Guards) from May 31
until June 26, when
authorities told his
family they were
releasing him
“temporarily.”
Although the secret
police demanded $43,000
in bail, officers
refused to issue a court
receipt for the family’s
cash payment.
At the time of his
release, Namvar was
experiencing fever,
severe back pain,
extremely high blood
pressure, uncontrollable
shaking of his limbs and
recurring short-term
memory loss.
“I have no doubt they
wanted to kill me,”
Namvar told Compass.
According to Namvar, who
converted from Islam to
Christianity as a
teenager, his severe
physical mistreatment
stemmed from his refusal
to give the police any
names or information
about other converts and
house church groups in
Iran.
In the spring of 2007,
he had been arrested and
severely tortured with
electrical shocks,
allegedly for baptizing
Muslims who had become
Christians. Three months
after back surgery for
those injuries, he
regained the ability to
walk, but still suffered
pain and discomfort.
Namvar presented himself
last week to the office
of the United Nations
High Commissioner for
Refugees (UNHCR) in
Ankara to apply for
status as an
asylum-seeker.
He and his family were
assigned by the UNHCR to
relocate in one of 30
designated satellite
cities in Turkey, where
he is required to sign
in daily at the local
police station. They
must wait 11 months,
until June 8, 2009, for
a UNHCR interview in
which they will detail
their reasons for
requesting asylum.
“We are tired in our
minds, and very sad,”
Namvar’s wife said after
learning they must wait
nearly a year in Turkey
before even presenting
her husband’s case. “We
were under so much
pressure in Iran, and
again we are facing it
here.”
While her husband was
under arrest, she had
been subjected to a
second police ransacking
of their home, repeated
telephone calls filled
with slander and death
threats and one attempt
to kidnap their son from
his school.
Namvar said he was
surprised that the
interviewing officer at
the UNHCR spent only six
minutes registering
information from their
passports. Following
standard UNHCR protocol,
the official did not ask
why they had fled from
their country, nor did
he collect copies of
documents they had
brought concerning his
case.
Nearly 15,000
applications for refugee
or asylum status are now
in process at the Ankara
office, which is the
largest UNHCR center in
Europe apart from the
Geneva headquarters.
“But even if they have
strong evidence for
their case, at best it
takes three to four
years for someone to be
resettled through our
office,” UNHCR external
affairs officer Metin
Corabatir told Compass.
Police Pressures
Although he earned his
living as a miner,
Namvar had been active
in preaching and
teaching the message of
Christ across northern
Iran since the early
1990s.
His first brush with the
authorities came when he
was caught in 2001
giving out Christian
literature at a gas
station. “I spent three
days in jail,” he
recalled.
After that, local police
demanded that he obtain
permission each time he
wanted to enter the city
near his home, in effect
banning him from the
region.
“The police created a
very bad atmosphere
there against us,”
Namvar said, “so no one
would even respond to
our greetings on the
street.”
Because of this, Namvar
moved his family to
Tehran. But he was
unable to find work, due
to his police record and
the requirement on all
job applications to
state his religion.
For the past seven
years, he has supported
himself by translating
books from English into
Farsi, while continuing
to visit and minister
among various house
church groups.
“I never knew God until
Jesus showed Himself to
me in a dream,” Namvar
said, recalling his
conversion to
Christianity 29 years
ago. “But ever since
then, I have followed
Jesus and told others
about Him.”
Under Iran’s hardline
Shiite government, a
Muslim who converts to
Christianity has
committed apostasy,
which is punishable by
death.
Iranian Christians
Mahmood Matin and Arash
Bandari have been jailed
since May 15 in Shiraz,
where they were arrested
on “suspicion” of
apostasy.
Under a draft law under
discussion this month in
the Iranian parliament,
the “optional” death
penalty now in force for
apostasy would become
obligatory.
###
Provided by
Compass Direct News