A
court sentence in Sudan ordering flogging and the death penalty for
Mariam Yahia Ibrahim Ishag has prompted an expression of “profound
concern” from Rev. Dr Olav Fykse Tveit, general secretary of the World
Council of Churches (WCC), who has urged President Omar Hassan Ahmad
Al-Bashir to “prevent the implementation of this unjust and
unconscionable sentence.”
Ishag, a 27-year-old Sudanese woman,
was criminally charged for converting from Islam to Christianity and
charged with committing adultery for marrying a Christian man, according
to media reports.
In his letter to President Omar Hassan Ahmad
Al-Bashir, sent on 23 May, Tveit expressed shock over the court’s
decision. “Whether Mrs Mariam Yahya Ibrahim Ishag was born of Muslim
parents or Christian parents, such a sentence runs counter to the letter
and spirit of the Sudanese Constitution,” Tveit said. According to the
Sudanese constitution, he added, all citizens have the “right to the
freedom of religious creed and worship.”
Tveit said that
condemning Mariam Yahya Ibrahim Ishag violates a fundamental principle
of international human rights law embodied in Sudan’s own constitution.
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