The husband of a pregnant Sudanese woman has declared his helplessness after
a Sudanese court sentenced his pregnant wife, Meriam Yehya Ibrahim to death
when she refused to recant her Christian faith.
"I'm so frustrated. I don't know what to do," Daniel Wani declared on Thursday. "I'm just praying."
"I'm so frustrated. I don't know what to do," Daniel Wani declared on Thursday. "I'm just praying."
This week, a Khartoum court convicted his wife,
Meriam Yehya Ibrahim, 27, of apostasy, or the renunciation of faith.
Ibrahim is a Christian, her husband said. But the
court considers her to be Muslim.
The court also convicted her of adultery and
sentenced her to 100 lashes because her marriage to a Christian man is
considered void under Sharia law.
The court gave her until Thursday to recant her
Christian faith - something she has refused to do, according to her lawyer.
According to CNN, Mohamed Jar Elnabi, who's
representing her said, a sheikh told the
court during Thursday's hearing, "how dangerous a crime like this is to
Islam and the Islamic community."
"I am a Christian," Meriam Yehya Ibrahim
fired back, "and I will remain a Christian."
Her legal team says it plans to appeal the verdict,
which drew swift condemnation from human rights organizations around the world.
In the meantime, Ibrahim, who is eight months'
pregnant, remains in prison with her 20-month-old son.
According to Elnabi, "She is very strong and
very firm. She is very clear that she is a Christian and that she will get out
one day,"
Ibrahim was born to a Sudanese Muslim father and an
Ethiopian Orthodox mother. Her father left when she was 6 years old, and
Ibrahim was raised by her mother as a Christian.
However, because her father was Muslim, the courts
considered her to be the same, which would mean her marriage to a non-Muslim
man is void.
The case, her lawyer said, started after Ibrahim's
brother filed a complaint against her, alleging that she had gone missing for
several years and that her family was shocked to find she had married a
Christian man.
A family divided
The court's ruling leaves a family divided, with
Ibrahim behind bars and her husband struggling to survive, Elnabi said.
Police blocked Wani from entering the courtroom on Thursday,
Elnabi said. Lawyers appealed to the judge, but he refused, Elnabi said.
Wani uses a wheelchair and "totally depends on
her for all details of his life," Elnabi said.
"He cannot live without her," said the
lawyer.
The couple's son is having a difficult time in
prison.
"He is very affected from being trapped inside
a prison from such a young age," Elnabi said. "He is always getting
sick due to lack of hygiene and bugs."
Ibrahim is having a difficult pregnancy, the lawyer
said. A request to send her to a private hospital was denied "due to
security measures."
There also is the question of the timing of a
potential execution.
In past cases involving pregnant or nursing women,
the Sudanese government waited until the mother weaned her child before executing
any sentence, said Christian Solidarity Worldwide spokeswoman Kiri Kankhwende.
Rights groups, governments ask for
compassion
Amnesty International describes Ibrahim as a prisoner of conscience.
Amnesty International describes Ibrahim as a prisoner of conscience.
"The fact that a woman could be sentenced to
death for her religious choice, and to flogging for being married to a man of
an allegedly different religion, is abhorrent and should never be even
considered," Manar Idriss, Amnesty International's Sudan researcher, said
in a statement.
"'Adultery' and 'apostasy' are acts which
should not be considered crimes at all, let alone meet the international
standard of 'most serious crimes' in relation to the death penalty. It is a
flagrant breach of international human rights law," the researcher said.
Katherine Perks with the African Centre for Justice
and Peace Studies said the verdict goes against Sudan's "own Constitution
and commitments made under regional and international law."
"Meriam has been convicted solely on account of
her religious convictions and personal status," she said.
Foreign embassies in Khartoum are urging the
government there to reverse course.
"We call upon the Government of Sudan to
respect the right to freedom of religion, including one's right to change one's
faith or beliefs, a right which is enshrined in international human rights law
as well as in Sudan's own 2005 Interim Constitution," the embassies of the
United States, United Kingdom, Canada and Netherlands said in a statement.
"We further urge Sudanese legal authorities to
approach Ms. Meriam's case with justice and compassion that is in keeping with
the values of the Sudanese people," it read.
'Egregious violations of freedom of
religion'
Attempts to contact Sudan's justice minister and
foreign affairs minister about the Ibrahim case were unsuccessful.
Sudan is one of the most difficult countries in the
world to be a Christian, according to international religious freedom monitors.
Under President Omar al-Bashir, the African nation
"continues to engage in systematic, ongoing and egregious violations of
freedom of religion or belief," the U.S. Commission on International
Religious Freedom said in its 2014 report.
The country imposes Sharia law on Muslims and
non-Muslims alike and punishes acts of "indecency" and
"immorality" by floggings and amputations, the commission said.
"Conversion from Islam is a crime punishable by
death, suspected converts to Christianity face societal pressures, and
government security personnel intimidate and sometimes torture those suspected
of conversion," said the commission, whose members are appointed by
Congress and the president.
The 8 worst places in the world to be religious
The Sudanese government has arrested Christians for
spreading their faith, razed Christian churches and confiscated Christians'
property, the commission said.
Since 1999, the U.S. State Department has called
Sudan one of the worst offenders of religious rights, counting it among eight
"countries of particular concern."
"The government at times enforced laws against
blasphemy and defaming Islam," the State Department said in its most
recent report on religious freedom, from 2012.
The State Department's other countries of concern,
all of which impose strict penalties on Christians or other faiths, are:
Myanmar (also known as Burma), China, Eritrea, Iran, North Korea, Saudi Arabia
and Uzbekistan.
Among all religious groups, Christians are the most
likely to be persecuted worldwide, according to a 2014 report by the Pew
Research Center.
Between June 2006 and December 2012, Christians were
harassed by governments in 151 countries, Pew reported. Islam was second, with
135 countries. Together, Christians and Muslims make up half of the world's
population, Pew noted.
Lawyer says he's gotten a death threat
Elnabi says he got a death threat a day before the
controversial court hearing, with an anonymous caller telling him to pull out
of representing Ibrahim or risk attack.
"I feel very scared," he said. "Since
yesterday, I live in fear if I just hear a door open or a strange sound in the
street."
Still, the lawyer said he'll continue representing
Ibrahim.
"I could never leave the case. This is a matter
of belief and principles," he said. "I must help someone who is in
need, even if it will cost me my life."
Source: CNN.COM