Bahá'í Gets Death Sentence in
Iran
PARIS, Feb 11 (Reuter) - An Islamic revolutionary court in Iran has
sentenced to death a 49-year-old Bahá'í for apostasy,
returning to his original faith after converting to Islam, the French
branch of the Bahá'í faith said on Sunday.
Dhabihu'llah Mahrami, an Agriculture Department employee in Yazd
province, will also have all his possessions confiscated according to
the court's ruling handed down in the past few days, a Bahá'í
spokeswoman said.
Mahrami, born a Bahá'í, was accused of converting to
Islam in 1981 to avoid being fired from his government job but returned
to the Bahá'í faith seven years later, according to
translations of court documents provided by the French
Bahá'ís.
"The Bahá'ís of France fear that this verdict marks a
resumption of open persecution against our co-religionists in Iran."
"Thanks to the pressures of international opinion, executions had
stopped...but there were still more subtle persecutions aimed at
strangling them economically and repressing them socially," she said.
The Bahá'í faith, an off-shoot of Islam, was created in
Iran 150 years ago. It says it has six million members worldwide
including 350,000 in Iran where, according to the court documents
released in Paris, it is officially considered "a misleading and
wayward sect."
The last execution of a Bahá'í in Iran was in 1992 when
Bahman Samandari, a leading community member, was executed.
|