A U.S. citizen being held in an Iranian prison for his Christian
activities has reportedly been moved to solitary confinement, prompting
concerns over his health and safety.
“We believe that he is being beaten in solitary confinement. We have no
way of finding out about his health,” said Naghmeh Abedini, whose
husband, Saeed, has been imprisoned in Iran since last fall.
“There will be no more visitations allowed and we will have no way of knowing how Saeed is doing,” she explained.
Pastor Saeed Abedini is an American citizen born in Iran who is
currently serving an eight-year sentence in Iran’s Evin Prison. Raised
Muslim, Abedini converted to Christianity in 2000, and after marrying an
American woman, he became an American citizen in 2010.
He spent time working with house churches in Iran until the government
ordered him to stop. Since 2009, he has worked exclusively with
non-religious orphanages in the country.
But despite complying with the government’s demands, he was arrested in
the fall of 2012 during a visit to these orphanages. He was charged with
posing a threat to national security through his previous work with the
Christian churches, even though the churches are technically legal in
the country.
Family members in Iran say that Abedini is weakened from torture and
beatings and has sustained internal injuries that have not received
medical treatment for months. They also warned that his kidneys may be
failing.
According to the American Center for Law and Justice, which is
representing Abedini’s wife in the U.S., the pastor was one of a number
of prisoners in his ward who signed “a letter expressing to prison
officials their concern about the lack of medical care received and the
threats and harsh treatment facing family members who come to visit.”
In addition, the prisoners “expressed their dissatisfaction in a
peaceful, silent protest in an outside courtyard at the prison.”
Ten prisoners, including Abedini, were then placed in solitary
confinement, and family members have said that they were turned away
from seeing him, being told that he is not allowed to have visitors any
longer.
Abedini “was most likely on a list of prisoners the prison wants to
break,” a former Iranian political prisoner told the American Center for
Law and Justice.
He suggested that the pastor was placed in solitary confinement “to put pressure on his belief and faith.”
The American Center for Law and Justice has voiced concerns that the
pastor is “likely to be beaten again, in private, away from other
witnesses and prisoners.” Given his internal injuries, possibly failing
kidney and lack of medical treatment, the group warned that Abedini is
“facing perhaps his most grave situation since his imprisonment last
fall.”
The organization has been working for months to raise awareness and
support of Abedini, calling on the U.S. government to intervene on
behalf of the American citizen in the face of Iran’s international law
violations. More than 40,000 people have sent letters of support and
encouragement to the pastor.
Abedini’s wife said that the pastor had previously been placed in
solitary confinement and described the experience as “the hardest time
in his life.”
She is now pleading urgently for prayers on behalf of her husband.
“Please pray for his health and healing. Pray for his release. Pray that
the Lord would use this for His Glory and salvation of many,” she said.