_World_ () |Thu, Oct.  07 2010 11:38 PM EDT
Saudi Authorities Charge 13 Expatriates with Proselytizing
By _Aaron J. Leichman_ 
(http://www.christianpost.com/author/aaron-j-leichman/) |Christian  Post 

 
Authorities in Saudi Arabia have charged 12 expatriates from the 
_Philippines_ (http://www.christianpost.com/region/philippines/)  and one from 
France 
with proselytizing,  according to an official at the Philippine Embassy in 
Riyadh.
 
Ezzedin H. Tago, the embassy’s recently designated diplomatic 
representative,  told the English-language Arab News that 12 of the expatriates 
had been  
temporarily released through petitions filed by their employers and the 
13th was  released on bail. 
“It (their release) did not mean that their case had been settled,” Tago  
clarified in a report Wednesday. 
“If they are proven guilty as charged, they would go back to jail,” he 
added,  though proselytizing in Saudi Arabia is punishable by death. 
According to reports, the 13 were arrested during a raid of a public mass  
that was attended last Friday by around 150 expatriates. 
In Saudi Arabia, the public practice of non-Muslim religions is strictly  
prohibited. Non-Muslims are only allowed to gather in homes for private  
religious services though the country’s Commission for the Promotion of Virtue  
and Prevention of Vice (CPVPV) has been known to conduct raids on private  
non-Muslim religious gatherings as well. 
According to initial reports, around 100 or so were altogether detained 
last  week, but later reports revealed that only the 13 were arrested as there 
was not  enough room at the police station and as the 13 were allegedly the 
organizers  and leaders of the group. 
In Saudi Arabia, conversion by Muslims to another religion (apostasy) and  
proselytizing by non-Muslims are punishable by death under the Islamic laws  
adopted by the country. 
Under the government's official interpretation of _Islam_ 
(http://www.christianpost.com/topics/islam/) , there is no legal recognition or 
protection of 
 religious freedom. In fact, overall government policies have been known 
place  severe restrictions on religious freedom, according to the U.S. State  
Department. 
The Philippine Embassy in Riyadh, which announced Tuesday that it was  
assisting the 12 overseas Filipino workers (OFWs) who were arrested, said it is 
 
closely monitoring the case and has made representations to the police. 
No information has yet been released regarding the French priest who had 
been  detained along with the 12.

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