Human rights advocates are warning that the health of an American
citizen imprisoned in Iran for his Christian faith is rapidly
deteriorating due to physical and psychological abuse.
For months, said Jordan Sekulow, executive director for the American
Center for Law and Justice, Pastor Saeed Abedini “has been suffering
from internal bleeding” cause by “injuries received from the beatings in
prison.”
“In what could only be viewed as a cruel act of psychological abuse,
prison officials took Pastor Saeed to a hospital last week – only to be
turned away – and brought back to Evin prison without receiving medical
treatment for his internal bleeding,” Sekulow said in an April 15 blog
post.
A native of Iran, Abedini was raised as a Muslim but converted to
Christianity in 2000. He became an American citizen in 2010 after
marrying an American woman.
The pastor worked with house churches in Iran until 2009, when he was
ordered by the government to stop his work. He then turned his focus to
non-religious orphanages.
However, he was arrested in late 2012 under
charges of threatening national security for his previous work with the
churches, despite the fact that these churches are technically legal in
Iran.
He was given an eight-year sentence and is being held in Evin prison,
an institution known for its particularly harsh treatment of prisoners.
The American Center for Law and Justice is representing Abedini’s wife,
Naghmeh, who lives in the United States with the couple’s two children.
The organization has been working to raise awareness of Abedini’s
plight, calling on U.S. officials to work for his freedom an
orchestrating an effort for people to send letters showing their support
for the pastor. More than 30,000 people have participated in the
initiative.
According to Sekulow, “the beatings and physical abuse are
intensifying,” and Abedini’s family has “reported that his physical
condition is worsening,” leading to frequent fainting spells made worse
by a lack of treatment.
“Iranian officials are telling Pastor Saeed it could be an additional
two months before he will receive medical treatment,” he continued.
“Such a delay is inhumane and a gross violation of Iran’s international
obligations.”
In addition, Sekulow said that Abedini is suffering psychological
torture from his prison mates. The pastor reported that his cellmates
recently threatened to suffocate him “in his sleep, making his death
look like an accident.”
“The daily threat that his life could be taken by his internal injuries
or by the hands of cellmates, weighs heavily on Pastor Saeed,” Sekulow
explained.
“I cannot express in words how concerned I am about Saeed's physical
and mental health,” said Abedini’s wife, adding that the “Iranian
government should know that we are watching and aware of what they are
doing to Saeed inside Evin prison.”
She asked Americans to “speak louder until Saeed is home safely on U.S. soil.”