Karazai needs to protect Afghan Christians: Afghan Christian Faces Death Penalty

Karazai needs to rid Afghanistan from the draconian laws. If Muslims are allowed to convert Christians in the West, then the same favor should be returned to Christians in the East.

Unfortunately Karazai is too busy biting the Pakistani hand that fed him for 18 years.

Shameful indeed.

Afghan Faces Death Penalty for Converting to Christianity

Judge Says He Could Escape Punishment If He’s Ruled Insane

**By GRETCHEN PETERS and LARA SETRAKIAN, with reporting by BILAL SARWARY **

KABUL, Afghanistan, March 20, 2006 — - Despite the overthrow of the fundamentalist Taliban government and the presence of 22,500 U.S. troops in Afghanistan, a man who converted to Christianity is being prosecuted in Kabul, and a judge said Sunday that if convicted, he faces the death penalty.
Abdul Rahman, who is in his 40s, says he converted to Christianity 16 years ago while working as an aid worker helping Afghan refugees in Pakistan.
Relatives denounced him as a convert during a custody battle over his children, and he was arrested last month. The prosecutor says Rahman was found with a Bible.
Human rights workers have described the case as an unsettling reminder that the country’s post-Taliban judiciary remains deeply conservative, and they have called on President Hamid Karzai to intervene. During Taliban times, men were forced to kneel in prayer five times a day, and couples faced the death penalty for sex outside marriage, for example. Reform efforts have been slow, say experts, since there are so few judges and lawyers with experience.
The U.S. State Department is watching the case closely and considers it a barometer of how well democracy is developing in Afghanistan.
“Our view … is that tolerance, freedom of worship is an important element of any democracy,” State Department spokesman Sean McCormack said. “And these are issues as Afghan democracy matures that they are going to have to deal with increasingly.”
A number of Christian nonprofit groups do humanitarian work in Afghanistan. Dominic Nutt of Christian Aid calls the Rahman case a step backward for the country, especially if Rahman is executed.
Nutt, who has spent time in Afghanistan, tells ABC News “few practitioners are used to the concept of democracy and toleration … [many] are educated only in Islamic law.”
Presiding judge Ansarullah Mawlazezadah tells ABC News a medical team was checking the defendant, since the team suspects insanity caused Rahman to reject Islam.
“We want to know that the doctors have given him a green light on his mental state, because he is not normal when he talks,” says the judge.
The post-Taliban constitution recognizes Islam as Afghanistan’s religion, and decrees that Islam’s Sharia law applies when a case is not covered by specific legislation. The prosecutor says under Sharia law, Abdul Rahman must die.
The judge, however, holds hopes for a solution.
“We will ask him if he has changed his mind about being a Christian,” Mawlazezadah says. “If he has, we will forgive him, because Islam is a religion of tolerance.”
The case has caused outcry among Afghan human rights groups, and reformists like Karzai have sought a more liberal, secular legal system.
“Afghan law protects freedom of religion,” says Naader Naderey of the Afghan Independent Human Rights Commission. “We want to see the reform of the judiciary. We want to see judges with wider legal experience.”
Rahman’s case contradicts Article 7 of Afghanistan’s constitution, which assures that “the state shall abide by … the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.” That declaration states that “everyone has the right to freedom of thought … to change his religion or belief.”
However, the constitution also states that Islamic law takes precedence over secular law and international treaties. Furthermore, the supreme court of that country has the right to veto certain provisions and interpret compliance with such treaties.
“I think that right now there’s in Afghanistan some differing interpretations of the Afghan constitution,” McCormack said. “These issues rightfully should get resolved through the court system. But they need to be resolved in a transparent way and according to the rule of law. It is a case that we are going to be following quite closely, though.”
One expert in Islamic law explains that Afghanistan’s penal code divides into two parts: the religious “huduud” dictated by the Koran and secular “ta’zir,” which is regulated by the state. Conversion to another religion is a crime under religious law, which takes precedence over the secular and more tolerant policy.
Muslim converts to Christianity have been prosecuted in other countries ruled by Islamic law. Since 1996, high-profile apostasy cases have put Christian converts on the stand in countries that include Iran, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia and the Sudan.
The legal scholar, who asks to remain anonymous given the sensitivity of the topic, says, “It’s a fundamental tenet under Islam that conversion to another religion is a heinous act. It has a touch of treason … there’s an aspect to it of betrayal against the communal identity.”

Re: Karazai needs to protect Afghan Christians: Afghan Christian Faces Death Penalty

Ya Man, this is crazy.

If this happened in a western country, where a person would be facing a death penalty for converting from Christianity to Islam, there would be massive uproar.

Its his own personal decision, and we can't do anything about it.

So let him be.

Re: Karazai needs to protect Afghan Christians: Afghan Christian Faces Death Penalty

No karazai no mushraaaf can do anything unless the people change

Re: Karazai needs to protect Afghan Christians: Afghan Christian Faces Death Penalty

Yes, Islam needs more and more guts of Wafa Sultan and Adonis..
Or as Adonis puts it very well, creativity will die, once creativity dies .....

Karazai, has to come to rescue of this guy......

Re: Karazai needs to protect Afghan Christians: Afghan Christian Faces Death Penalty

yes that syrian poe adonis has put it so convincingly.. if alah can let satan exist it means he doesn't mind advocacy of opposite opinion by someone.. so let the opinon flow.......