The Islamic regime in Tehran has sentenced an Iranian couple to a prison term for merely practicing Christianity.
Article 18, an organization that promotes religious freedom and supports
Iran’s repressed Christians through documentation and advocacy, tweeted
on Thursday that “A Christian couple have reported that a court in
Boushehr has just sentenced them & 10 other Iranian Christians to
one year in prison each for ‘Propagating against the Islamic Republic in
favor of Christianity.’ This group of Christian converts were arrested
on April 7th, 2015.”Christian news website Mohabat News reported on
Wednesday that the Iranian couple cited by Article 18, who were part of
the group of converts, were charged with “orientation toward the land of
Christianity.”
Jeff King, the president of Washington, DC-based International Christian
Concern, told The Jerusalem Post on Friday that each member of the
congregation was sentenced to a year in prison.
“Getting information on the arrests of Christians is incredibly
challenging given the heavily censored nature of Iran,” King said. “But
based on the cases we have been tracking, this is the first time this
year that we’ve seen a jail sentence being given based on the charge of
‘inclination to the land of Christianity.’ This could be interpreted as a
reference to Israel, the birthplace of Christianity and also a country
that Iran has adopted a very aggressive stance towards.”
While Christianity is legally recognized in the Islamic Republic, the US
State Department has classified Iran as a “country of particular
concern” under the International Religious Freedom Act of 1998 “for
having engaged in or tolerated particularly severe violations of
religious freedom.”
The Islamic Republic’s constitution, which is rooted in fundamentalist
Sharia, states that Zoroastrians, Jews and Christians (excluding
converts from Islam), can worship “within the limits of the law.”
The World Christian Database statistic said there are an estimated 350,000 Christians in Iran.
Iran’s regime says 117,700 Christians live in the country. Iran has a population of more than 80.2 million people.
“Iran does not discriminate against or persecute any recognized
religious minority,” said Alireza Miryousefi, head of press for the
Iranian Mission to the UN. “Including the large Christian community
inside Iran, who are free to worship in the many churches that can be
found across Iran. In fact, as is the case with Iranian Jews, Iranian
Christians are constitutionally guaranteed parliamentary representation.
Major cities such as Tehran and Isfahan are home to large Christian
communities with centuries-old churches.”
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