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Africa Horn
Meriam Ibrahim Freed Again in Sudan, now at U.S. Embassy
2014-06-28
A Christian mother formerly on death row in Sudan has taken refuge at the U.S. Embassy after being released from police custody for a second time. Meriam Ibrahim, 27, was sentenced to death on apostasy charges — the crime of denouncing Islam.
Bold text is mine. I suspect NBC has a Moslem working for them editing copy. She didn't, from what I've read, "denounce" Islam, though I suppose she could be said to have renounced it. But the story goes that she was raised as a Christian, not even that she converted.
The very act of renouncing it, or being raised as something else, counts as being a denouncer, according to some of our head-banging friends in the great schools of learning in Cairo, Qom and Peshawar...
She was freed Monday following international outcry, but rearrested a day later at Khartoum's airport while trying to fly to the U.S. with her husband, who is an American citizen, and two children, one of whom she gave birth to while in prison.

A video report by the BBC's Arabic service showed Ibrahim released for a second time late Thursday. But Ibrahim's passage to the U.S. may still be blocked as she now faces forgery charges relating to the emergency travel documents she attempted to use to get out of the country. According to Reuters, Ibrahim was released on the condition that she not attempt to leave the country. Speaking before Ibrahim was freed from custody, State Department spokeswoman Marie Harf said Thursday that the woman had all the documents she needed to travel to U.S. "It's up to the government of Sudan to allow her to exit the country," Harf told reporters.

Relief for Sudan Christian family in US embassy refuge

Khartoum -- The husband of a Sudanese Christian woman facing threats after her apostasy death sentence was overturned expressed relief on Friday that the family has been given refuge at the US embassy.

"Really, it's good," Daniel Wani, the American husband of Meriam Yahia Ibrahim Ishag, 26, told AFP by telephone, adding that embassy staff have been "very helpful and very nice."

He said his wife and two children, who could be heard in the background, are doing well at the heavily-guarded facility on the outskirts of Khartoum. Wani confirmed that they have sought the embassy's protection because of death threats against his wife.

In Washington, State Department spokeswoman Marie Harf said Ishag and her family were "in a safe location" and Sudan's government "has assured us of the family's continued safety."

Citing privacy considerations, she declined to specify further the location of Ishag, whose arrest -- and potential execution -- raised deep concern among Western governments and rights activists.

One of Ishag's lawyers, Mohanad Mustafa, told AFP late Thursday that the family had gone to the US mission after her release from a police station where she had been held since security agents stopped them from travelling to the United States on Tuesday. The family think the embassy "is a safe place for them," Musfafa said.

Ishag is charged with forgery and providing false information in relation to a South Sudanese travel document she used to try to leave the country, a day after an appeal court overturned her apostasy conviction and released her from prison. Following her release, she immediately went into hiding at another location because of the threats to her life.

Christian activists say her "alleged brother" stated that the family would carry out the death sentence if she were acquitted.

Ishag was born to a Muslim father and an Ethiopian Orthodox Christian mother. Her father abandoned the family when Ishag was five, leaving her to be raised by her mother, according to the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Khartoum, which said she joined the Catholic church shortly before she married.

On May 15 a court convicted Ishag under Islamic sharia law that has been in force in Sudan since 1983 and outlaws conversions on pain of death.
Posted by:Steve White

#1  a "religion" that has to demand nobody ever leave it under penalty of death is a weak-ass cult, not a religion.
Posted by: Frank G   2014-06-28 09:59  

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