Three Christian converts, including a woman pregnant with her first child, have been sentenced to years in prison on charges related to their religious beliefs and worship meetings.
Abbas Soori (pictured left), Mehran Shamloui (pictured right) and Narges Nasri (pictured centre), who is approximately halfway through her pregnancy, were sentenced by notorious Revolutionary Court judge Iman Afshari on 8 March – International Women’s Day.
Narges, who is 37 years old, received the stiffest sentence – 10 years for “propaganda activities contrary to Islamic law”, five for membership in an “opposition group” (house-church) and an additional one year for “propaganda against the state” – for having posted on social media in support of the Women, Life, Freedom movement.
Abbas, 48, received a total of 15 years in prison – 10 years for “propaganda activities” and five for membership of an “opposition group” – while Mehran, 37, received an eight-year sentence for the first charge and two years and eight months for the second.
All three were also sentenced to years of deprivation of social rights, such as to health, employment or education – 15 years each for Narges and Abbas, and 11 years for Mehran – in addition to fines of up to one year’s wage. Narges and Abbas were also banned from membership in any group, banned from residing in their home province of Tehran and banned from leaving Iran for two years after their release.
The three Christians were arrested on 3 November 2024 during concurrent raids by intelligence agents on their homes in Tehran, during which personal belongings including Bibles, crosses and musical instruments were confiscated. (Mehran is a musician, and the equipment the agents confiscated from him was of high value).
The Christians were then transferred to Ward 209 of Evin Prison, which is under the control of the Ministry of Intelligence.
They were released on bail a month later, following a series of lengthy and intensive interrogations.
Their court hearing took place on 15 February in Branch 26 of the Revolutionary Court of Tehran, where they were officially charged with “membership of opposition groups”, “propaganda against the system” and “propaganda activities contrary to Islamic law through foreign relations”, under the Iranian Penal Code.
At least 10 other Christians were arrested on that same November day during coordinated raids on Christian homes across the country, including in the cities of Karaj (near Tehran), Mashhad in the north-east, and Shiraz and Bandar Abbas in the south.
Abbas was also previously arrested in 2020 and later sentenced alongside another Christian convert, Maryam Mohammadi, and their pastor, an Iranian-Armenian, Anooshavan Avedian.
Abbas and Maryam received non-custodial punishments, including travel bans, exile from the province of Tehran and prohibition of membership in any political or social groups, while Anooshavan, who is in his 60s, was given a 10-year prison term. He was acquitted in September last year, having served just over one year of his sentence.
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