Afghan convert 'faced certain death'
by 
Friday 31 March 2006 5:03 AM GMT 

  
Rahman has been granted asylum in Italy  

An Afghan man who faced the death penalty in his homeland for 
converting from Islam to Christianity says he was certain he would 
have been killed if he had remained in Kabul.


Speaking in Italy, which has granted him asylum, Abdul Rahman said in 
an interview with Italian journalists he also wanted to thank the 
pope for intervening on his behalf.

"In Kabul they would have killed me, I'm sure of it," said Rahman, 
41, who is under protection in a secret location in Italy. 

"If you are not a Muslim in an Islamic country like mine they kill 
you, there are no doubts."

He said his case was to serve as an example "to others who dared 
rebel."

Television footage of the interview show on Italy's RAI1 evening news 
showed a few people gathered around a small table, but did not reveal 
Rahman's face.

Silvio Berlusconi, the Italian prime minister, said Rahman arrived in 
Italy before dawn Wednesday, hours before the conservative leader 
announced that the government had agreed to grant him asylum.

His case has attracted wide attention in the West and led to calls by 
the US and other governments for the Afghan government to protect the 
convert.

Betrayal

The pope had appealed to Afghan President Hamid Karzai to intervene 
in the case after Muslim clerics in Afghanistan threatened Rahman's 
life, saying his conversion was a "betrayal to Islam."

In a letter to Karzai dated March 22, Pope Benedict XVI had said that 
dropping the case "would bestow great honor upon the Afghan people 
and would raise a chorus of admiration in the international 
community."

Rahman was released from prison on Monday after a court dismissed 
charges of apostasy against him for lack of evidence and suspicions 
he might be mentally ill.

Rahman, who converted 16 years ago while working as an aid worker for 
an international Christian group in Pakistan, was arrested last month 
after police discovered him with a Bible. 

Italy has close ties with Afghanistan, whose former king, Mohammed 
Zaher Shah, was allowed to live with his family in exile in Rome for 
30 years. 

The former royals returned to Kabul after the fall of the Taliban 
regime.


Agencies
By 

You can find this article at:
http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/F756089C-7BAA-4B17-86B2-
946230716656.htm 
 


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