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Originally posted by I1Am1Ready1Are1You
its been on the news for a few days. a local man doing a humanitarian service over seas is facing execution. it has been almost 3 months since hits abduction. i have heard no news cast besides local stations talk about this. this is an AMERICAN civilian on a humanitarian mission about to leave his family behind. the USA must act to protect our own, and to set a bar for how Americans well be treated when unarmed over seas.
Originally posted by I1Am1Ready1Are1You
its been on the news for a few days. a local man doing a humanitarian service over seas is facing execution. it has been almost 3 months since hits abduction. i have heard no news cast besides local stations talk about this. this is an AMERICAN civilian on a humanitarian mission about to leave his family behind. the USA must act to protect our own, and to set a bar for how Americans well be treated when unarmed over seas.
www.washingtontimes.com
As this is being written, Saeed Abedini, an American citizen and evangelical pastor, sits in an Iranian jail awaiting his trial. The expected ruling is death, for charges which are presumed to be related to his Christian faith. The State Department, which works closely with the Organization of Islamic Cooperation to stamp out “intolerance” and “Islamophobia” against Muslims in America, has been virtually silent about Mr. Abedini’s predicament in Iran, one of the member states of the Organization of Islamic Cooperation.
Thirty-two-year-old Saeed Abedini was raised in Iran as a Muslim. At age 20 he converted to Christianity and subsequently became an evangelical pastor. He married a U.S. citizen, and is now a U.S. citizen himself. He and his wife have two children, ages 4 and 6.
reason.com
Naghmeh Abedini has been told by attorneys for her husband, Saeed, to expect the worst at Monday's trial, where the 32-year-old husband and father faces the capital charge of compromising national security.