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March 28, 2006 San Diego
Released Afghan convert asks for asylum abroad

Kabul (AsiaNews)
- Abdul Rahman, the Afghan man who faced the death penalty for converting to
Christianity from Islam, has been set free. Rahman was released during the
night from Pul-e-Charki, the maximum security prison where he was being
detained, and his present whereabouts are unknown.
The deputy
Attorney General, Mohammed Eshak Aloko, said Rahman was released after he
was declared to be “mentally unstable and unfit to stand trial”.
Yesterday,
the UN spokesman in Kabul said Rahman, who converted to the Christian faith
16 years ago, had asked for asylum in a third country.
Abdul
Rahman, whose conversion to Christianity was denounced by his relatives,
risked being sentenced to death by an Islamic court, in line with Muslim
tradition.
Many
governments, and Pope Benedict XVI himself, called on President Hamid Karzai
to spare the man’s life. Karzai had promised not to inflict the death
penalty on calling for his execution.

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