Serving Persecuted Christians Worldwide - Update: Christian convert released to be with son who has leukaemia - Open Doors UK & Ireland
News
01 May 2023

Update: Christian convert released to be with son who has leukaemia

A convert imprisoned for Christian activity has been released to be with her son who has leukaemia. 


Iranian prisoners

Malihe Nazari (left), Joseph Shahbazian and Mina Khajavi were given a combined 22 years in prison

In good news, a Christian convert serving a six-year prison sentence has been released, just two days before her son – who suffers from leukaemia – turned 25. Malihe Nazari is believed to have been granted her release by the Supreme Court due to her son's condition. 

She was sentenced last year alongside two other converts, Mina Khajavi and Joseph Shahbazian. Mina has yet to serve her sentence due to ill health (she suffered a bad ankle break when a car ran over her last year), whilst Joseph – an Iranian-Armenian pastor – remains in prison but the Supreme Court has ordered a retrial of his case

Please pray

  • Praise God for Malihe’s release
  • That Malihe will recover from her ordeal and that her son will be completely heal of leukaemia
  • That the charges against Mina and Joseph will be dropped. 

Source: Article 18

--

23 June 2022

Iranian government maintains it allows religious freedom as three Christians sentenced to 6-10 years in prison

Three Iranian Christians have been given prison sentences totalling 22 years for organising and establishing house churches – all while the government maintains it espouses freedom of religion. 

Imprisonment, exile and fines

In June and July 2020, seven Christian converts were among dozens arrested in a series of raids. Earlier this month, three of these believers – Joseph Shahbazian (58), Mina Khajavi (59) and Malihe Nazari (48) – were given prison sentences for taking a leading role in house church activities with ‘the intention of disturbing national security’.

Joseph Shahbazian – an Iranian-Armenian pastor – was given a ten-year sentence followed by a two-year exile in a remote part of Iran. After his release, he will not be allowed to travel abroad or become a member of a social or political group, and he will be required to report regularly to Iran’s intelligence service for two years. The two women were given six-year sentences. 

The other four converts – Salar Eshraghi Moghadam, Farhad Khazaee, Somayeh (Sonya) Sadegh and her mother Masoumeh Ghasemi – also received prison sentences but were instead allowed to pay fines (approximately between £650 and £1,000). They all now have criminal records which will impact future opportunities such as employment.

According to Article 18, the judge who presided over the case, Iman Afshari, is ‘fast building a reputation for harsh sentences against Christians’. In April, he sentenced Fariba Dalir, another woman convert, to two-years imprisonment for ‘acting against national security’ by establishing and leading a church. 

Government’s words ring hollow

News of these verdicts come as the Iranian government – in response to a UN report about its human rights track record – maintains that its citizens enjoy freedom of religion. 

“No one is prosecuted in Iran for merely holding an opinion or belonging to a particular class or group,” it said in a statement published by Iranian news agency Tasnim. “Staging gatherings and rallies and attending assemblies is an undeniable right of citizens, which has been recognized in Article 27 of the Constitution and other regulations.” 

The news is yet another setback following the positive developments earlier this year with the acquittal of nine prisoners who were imprisoned for their faith. It reinforces the unpredictable nature of justice in Iran and why Christians who continue to gather secretly do so knowing that it could land them in prison. Please continue to pray for our Iranian family who are following Jesus no matter the cost.

Source: Article 18


Please pray
  • That these three Christians and their families will feel the depths of God’s love for them
  • That individuals in authority in Iran will be stirred to use their influence to overturn these verdicts
  • For the protection of house churches in Iran, and for God to lift those feeling especially discouraged or anxious at this time.
Subscribe today
 

You can receive updates from the persecuted church, and how you can pray for and support them, by signing up for regular emails.
 

Sign me up

Share this story

Get involved

Your support helps persecuted Christians continue to courageously follow Jesus.
Together, we can reach those where persecution hits hardest.