Thursday, March 30, 2006

As Rahman Gets Asylum In Italy, New Questions Raised In U.S.

Abdul Rahman, the convert from Islam to Christianity who faced a possible death sentence in Afghanistan, was granted political asylum in Italy on Wednesday. The Chicago Tribune reports that even though Afghanistan's Parliament sent a letter to the Interior Ministry demanding that Rahman not be allowed to leave the country, he was secretly flown to Italy Wednesday night. Today's Middle East Times says that Afghanistan's Parliament will conduct an inquiry into the judiciary's decision to free Rahman. Meanwhile the Taliban said that the developments show President Hamid Karzai's government to be a "puppet" to foreign powers, and called for jihad against Karzai's administration.

In the wake of these developments, this week's issue of Forward carries an excellent article analyzing the impact that the Rahman affair has had on evangelical Christians in the United States. The paper says that the controversy left evangelicals questioning the Bush administration's assumption that Muslim countries can become democratic while adhering to Islamic law and Muslim customs.