Meriam was
imprisoned for her faith as a Christian in Sudan with a charge of apostasy and
had to deliver her daughter while in prison awaiting verdict. She got support
and petitions signed in her favour from all over the world as she would have
been killed if she was found guilty. She was found not guilty but she had to
leave her country, arriving in Italy
today. Meriam met with the Pope soon after her arrival in Rome . Continue...
Meriam Yahia Ibrahim Ishag flew to Rome with her family after more than a month in the US embassy in Khartoum .
There was
global condemnation when she was sentenced to hang for apostasy by a Sudanese
court.
Mrs
Ibrahim's father is Muslim so according to Sudan 's version of Islamic law she
is also Muslim and cannot convert.
She was
raised by her Christian mother and says she has never been Muslim.
Welcoming
her at the airport, Italy 's
Prime Minister Matteo Renzi said: "Today is a day of celebration."
Mrs Ibrahim met Pope Francis at his Santa Marta residence at the Vatican soon after her arrival.
"The
Pope thanked her for her witness to faith," Vatican
spokesman Father Federico Lombardi was quoted as saying.
The meeting,
which lasted around half an hour, was intended to show "closeness and
solidarity for all those who suffer for their faith," he added.
The BBC's Alan Johnston in Rome says there was no prior indication of Italy 's
involvement in the case.
A senior
Sudanese official told Reuters news agency that the government in Khartoum had approved her
departure in advance.
Mrs
Ibrahim's lawyer Mohamed Mostafa Nour told BBC Focus on Africa
that she travelled on a Sudanese passport she received at the last minute.
"She is
unhappy to leave Sudan .
She loves Sudan
very much. It's the country she was born and grew up in," he said.
"But her life is in danger so
she feels she has to leave. Just two days ago a group called Hamza made a
statement that they would kill her and everyone who helps her," he added.
Mrs
Ibrahim's husband, Daniel Wani, also a Christian, is from South Sudan and has US nationality.
Their
daughter Maya was born in prison in May, shortly after Mrs Ibrahim was
sentenced to hang for apostasy - renouncing one's faith.
Under
intense international pressure, her conviction was quashed and she was freed in
June.
She was given South Sudanese travel
documents but was arrested at Khartoum
airport, with Sudanese officials saying the travel documents were fake.
These new
charges meant she was not allowed to leave the country but she was released
into the custody of the US
embassy in Khartoum .
Last week,
her father's family filed a lawsuit trying to have her marriage annulled, on
the basis that a Muslim woman is not allowed to marry a non-Muslim.
No comments:
Post a Comment