Christian pastor Saeed Abedini, an American imprisoned in Iran on
charges of evangelizing, was sentenced this morning to eight years in
prison.
According to the American Center for Law and Justice,
Abedini was verbally sentenced in Tehran by Judge Pir-Abassi, known as
the “hanging judge,” to eight years in prison for threatening the
national security of Iran through his leadership in Christian house
churches. He will serve the time in Iran’s notorious Evin Prison, known
as one of the most brutal.
The evidence, the ACLJ reports, was
based on Abedini’s activities primarily during the early 2000s, when
house churches were not considered a threat in Iran.
“This is a
real travesty – a mockery of justice,” Jordan Sekulow, Executive
Director of the ACLJ, who represents Pastor Saeed’s wife and children
living in the U.S., said in a statement. “From the very beginning,
Iranian authorities have lied about all aspects of this case, even
releasing rumors of his expected release. Iran has not only abused its
own laws, it has trampled on the fundamentals of human rights. We call
on the citizens of the world to rise up in protest. We call on
governments around the world to stand and defend Pastor Saeed.”
Although
the U.S. does not have diplomatic relations with Iran, National
Security Council spokesperson Bernadette Meehan said in a statement
Sunday the administration is "deeply disappointed that Saeed Abedini has
been sentenced to eight years in prison in Iran on a charge related to
his religious beliefs.
"We condemn Iran's continued violation of
the universal right of freedom of religion and we call on the Iranian
authorities to release Mr. Abedini."
Meehan added that the State Department remains in close contact with Abedini.
The State Department also called for Abedini's release.
"Mr.
Abedini's attorney had only one day (January 21) to present his
defense, so we remain deeply concerned about the fairness and
transparency of Mr. Abedini's trial," spokesman Darby Holladay said in a
statement.
Iran's state news agency reported last Monday that
Abedini, who was born in Iran but now lives in Idaho, would soon be
free. But the report, which came on the first day of Abedini's trial,
was seen by Abedini's wife, Naghmeh, as just another cruel manipulation.
“This
is all a lie by the Iranian media," Naghmeh Abedini said. "This has
been a repeated promise by the Iranian regime since Saeed was first
thrown in prison on Sept. 26, 2012. We have presented bail. After the
judge told Saeed’s lawyer that bail was back on the table, the family in
Tehran ran around in circles today to make sure Saeed was let out on
bail. But again the bail officer rejected bail."
She said her
husband's attorney in Iran, Nasser Sarbazi, cautioned her that the
report, first carried by the state-controlled ISNA news agency and
picked up by The Associated Press, did not mean her husband was closer
to freedom.
The 34-year-old father of two denied evangelizing in
Iran and claims he had only returned to his native land to help
establish an orphanage. Authorities pulled him off a bus last August and
threw him into the notorious Evin Prison in Tehran.
The exact
crimes he is accused of only became public on Monday, when the
prosecutor outlined charges that Abedini undermined the Iranian
government by creating a network of Christian house churches and that he
was attempting to sway Iranian youth away from Islam.
"This
trial apparently is focused on 13 years ago, when Pastor Saeed converted
from Islam to Christianity,” Sekulow said in a statement to FoxNews.com
last week.
According to the ACLJ, upon hearing the news of her
husband's sentence, Naghmeh Abedini said: “The promise of his release
was a lie. We should not trust the empty words or promises put out by
the Iranian government. These false hopes amount to psychological
torture. You don’t want to trust them, but they build a glimmer hope
before the crushing blow. With today’s development I am devastated for
my husband and my family. We must now pursue every effort, turn every
rock, and not stop until Saeed is safely on American soil.”
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