ROME,
March 21, 2006 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) – The Italian
government summoned on Tuesday, March 21, the Afghan ambassador to
Rome to express its concern over reports that a man in Afghanistan
faces the death penalty because he has converted to Christianity.
"If
this news is confirmed, Italy will move at the highest level ... to
prevent something which is incompatible with the defense of human
rights and fundamental freedoms," said a Foreign Ministry
statement cited by Reuters.
Foreign
Minister Gianfranco Fini said Italy would raise the issue with
European Union leaders in an effort to save the man.
Abdur
Rahman, 41, was arrested last month after his relatives reported his
conversion to Christianity to the police.
The
man, who converted 16 years ago as an aid worker helping refugees in
Pakistan, is now on trial and could face the death penalty if refusing
to revert to Islam.
Germany
earlier condemned the persecution of Rahman as "intolerable"
and appealed to Afghan President Hamid Karzai to save him from the
death penalty, citing his right to religious freedom.
The
United States is watching the trial closely as a test of democracy and
religious freedom for the Kabul government, one of its key allies.
"Our
view certainly ... is that tolerance, freedom of worship, is an
important element of any democracy," State Department spokesman
Sean McCormack said Monday.
Afghanistan's
constitution states: "No law can be contrary to the sacred
religion of Islam."
Prominent
Muslim scholar Sheikh Yusuf Al-Qaradawi said that Islam does not
execute the apostate who does not proclaim his apostasy or call for
it. Rather, it leaves the punishment for the Hereafter if he dies in
the state of apostasy.
He
cited the noble verse: "And if any of you turn back from their
faith and die in unbelief, their works will bear no fruit in this life
and in the Hereafter; they will be the inmates of the Fire and will
abide therein." (Al-Baqarah 2: 217)
Well-known
Egyptian thinker Jamal Al-Banna states that apostasy is not a crime at
the first place. The Islamic Shari`ah was originally based on the
freedom of belief which is the only freedom upon which the Shari`ah
was founded, and the other forms of freedom were based on the Shari`ah
and they took their legitimacy from the freedom of belief.
On
the other hand, Mohammad Salim Al-`Awwa, member of the International
Association of Muslim Scholars, stated that the Ever-Glorious Qur'an
did not specify a worldly punishment for apostasy. The Qur'anic verses
talking about apostasy only warned of a punishment for the apostate in
the Hereafter, echoing Qaradawi's stance.
"Although
we admit that apostasy is a crime, I doubt that the punishment
mentioned by some classical jurists in the books of jurisprudence for
apostasy is the capital punishment. I further doubt to include this
form of punishment as a legal punishment prescribed by the Shari`ah. I
am of the opinion that the punishment for apostasy is a discretionary
one that is wholly left to concerned authorities to apply in the
Muslim State," said Awwa.
Well-known
Azharite scholar Sheikh `Abdul-Majeed Subh had said that the
punishment for apostasy is dependent on the public interest of the
Muslim nation and the assessment of scholars to each case.
"If
the apostate does not harm the Muslim society, there may be no need
for killing him."