The Christians are also charged with crimes 'against national security'. Release International calls on Iran to grant freedom of religion to its citizens.
Three Iranian Christians are to appeal a sentence of 80 lashes for
taking communion wine. The Christians are converts from Muslim
backgrounds. The sentence reflects the state's hard-line refusal to
recognise the right of Muslims to change their religion.
Release International is calling for the Iranian authorities to
allow its citizens to choose their own faith and to acquit the
Christians. They also face charges of crimes 'against national
security'.
Drinking alcohol is not illegal for Christians
in Iran, but is forbidden for Muslims. The charges brought against
these Christian converts reflect the state position that once a
Muslim, always a Muslim.
'Why should Christians be lashed
for taking communion?' asks Release Chief Executive Paul Robinson.
'And why is Iran refusing to allow its own citizens that most
basic of all freedoms, the freedom to choose their own faith? These
men have chosen to call themselves Christians. The state should
respect that.'
Yaser Mosibzadeh, Saheb Fadayee and
Mohammed Reza Omidi (also known as Youhan) were arrested at their
house church in Rasht on May 13. According to Middle East Concern,
Mohammed Reza was one of four Christians from a Muslim background who
was given 80 lashes for the same charge in 2012.
The Christians are appealing against the verdict, but they also face
more serious charges of 'action against national security', along with
their pastor, Yousef Nadarkhani. They are due to face the
Revolutionary Court in Rasht on October 15.
Iran stepped
up its crackdown on Christian activists in 2015. Ninety prisoners are
now in jail for their faith. Many have been beaten and abused. Some
have been threatened with death. Iranian officials often target
evangelical house groups.
Repression against the church
has increased since 2010 when Ayatollah Khamenei branded house
churches a threat to national security. Christians are often accused
of 'undermining national security'. And this latest case is no
exception.
Yet the church in Iran continues to grow
despite being under constant pressure.
Freedom for all
faiths other than Shia Islam is limited, despite constitutional
guarantees of religious liberty. Evangelising Muslims is illegal and
the official penalty for apostasy (conversion from Islam) is death,
although the sentence has rarely been carried out.
Christians make up just half of one per cent of the population. Most
are discriminated against in education, employment and property
ownership.
Many of Iran's Christians are ethnic Armenians
or Assyrians. To limit the spread of the faith, many of their churches
have been closed or restricted to conducting services in Armenian or
Assyrian. This has driven many congregations underground.
Most Christians in Iran now meet in private homes. Prominent figures
such as pastors may come under the scrutiny of the Ministry of Culture
and Islamic Guidance. Many are forced out of the country.
Christians from a Muslim background pay a particularly high price. A
number of Iranian Christians who were raised as Muslims remain in
detention. Some suffer severe ill-health due to lack of medical
treatment and beatings from prison staff and other inmates.
'Iran's President Rouhani was elected on a platform promising
reform. The greatest reform he could offer his people is to allow them
true freedom of religion,' says Paul Robinson of Release.