Good on ya, Silvio.
Ummm.loose lips sink ships (give the hit squad a place to look).
Bravo Italia!
Wonderful news!
good news.
All you Catholics should be very proud today.
Vive Italia! Vive il Papa!
Leni
If true- this is a truly generous and gutsy move by Italy!
It looks like the guy is out of danger, but I can't say I'm happy about this as a Big Picture kind of thing.
The status quo in Afghanistan has not changed. Nothing happened here that prevents them from charging another guy for the same thing.
This case was "dropped for lack of evidence", which is as big a lie as they come, not because Sharia law was ruled to be an abomination or because the Afghanistan government respected the UN documents incorporated into their Constitution that specifically prohibit this kind of prosecution.
Good!
This is wonderful news....finally something positive for a change...
Italy is a little freaky in places, but it beats the h*ll out of the middle east insane asylum.
Good for Berlusconi and the Italians. I hope the man can live the remainder of his life peacefully, now.
Yes!
Italy Welcomes Man Who Fled Afghanistan
ROME - Italy granted asylum Wednesday to an Afghan who faced the death penalty for converting from Islam to Christianity, and Premier Silvio Berlusconi said the man was in the care of the Interior Ministry after arriving in Italy earlier in the day.
Abdul Rahman "is already in Italy. I think he arrived overnight," Berlusconi said, declining to release more details.
Rahman's jailing in Afghanistan inspired an appeal by Pope Benedict XVI to Afghanistan President Hamid Karzai and efforts by the United Nations to find a country to take him. Foreign Minister Gianfranco Fini had been outspoken about the case from the start, saying Italy had a duty to make clear its "indignation." Conversion is a crime under Afghanistan's Islamic law. Rahman, 41, was arrested last month after police discovered him with a Bible. He was brought to trial last week for converting 16 years ago while working as a medical aid worker for an international Christian group helping Afghan refugees in Pakistan. Afghanistan's parliament had demanded earlier Wednesday that the government prevent Rahman from being able to flee the country. Germany, where Rahman once lived, praised the Italian offer. "This is a humanitarian signal and we welcome it," German government spokesman Thomas Steg said. Anticipating that Italy's Cabinet would approve Rahman's asylum, Interior Minister Giuseppe Pisanu said Tuesday that such a move would bring "all the forms of protection and assistance" related to recognizing refugee status. Italy has close ties with Afghanistan, whose former king, Mohammed Zaher Shah, was allowed to live with his family in exile in Rome for 30 years. The former royals returned to Kabul after the fall of the Taliban regime a few years ago. Italian troops were sent into Afghanistan after the U.S.-led invasion of the country in 2001 to help with reconstruction. Muslim clerics in Afghanistan condemned Rahman's release, saying it was a "betrayal of Islam," and threatened to incite violent protests. Some 500 Muslim leaders, students and others gathered Wednesday in a mosque in southern Qalat town and criticized the government for releasing Rahman, said Abdulrahman Jan, the top cleric in Zabul province. He said the government should either force Rahman to convert back to Islam or kill him. "This is a terrible thing and a major shame for Afghanistan," he said.
When I was growing up Italians and Poles were the butts of most of the ethnic jokes I heard.
Strangely, these days Poland and Italy seem to be the only two countries in Europe who take pride in their Christian heritage and are willing to do something about it without a lot of waffling.