Sudanese woman facing death penalty gives birth

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SUDAN

The Sudanese woman who is facing death penalty for abandoning her religious faith has given birth in jail.

Meriam Yehya Ibrahim Ishag married a Christian man and was sentenced to death by hanging for committing apostasy (renunciation of belief) earlier this month after refusing to renounce Christianity.

The 27-year-old woman gave birth to a baby girl in the early hours of Tuesday morning in a hospital wing at the prison.

She also has her 20-month-old son with her as he has been held with her in prison since late February, her Lawyer said.

Correspondents say death sentences are rarely carried out in Sudan.

Ms Ibrahim’s legal team lodged an appeal on 22 May as her Lawyer Elshareef Ali   says the verdict contravenes the constitution’s enshrining of freedom of faith, the Bloomberg news agency reports.

Western embassies and rights groups have urged Sudan to respect the right of the woman to choose her religion.

She is allowed to nurse her baby girl for two years before the sentence is carried out.

Born to a Muslim father, she was convicted by a Sharia court. Sudan has a majority Muslim population, which is governed by Islamic law.

Ms Ibrahim was also convicted of adultery on the grounds that her marriage to a Christian man from South Sudan was void under Sudan’s version of Islamic law, which says Muslim women cannot marry non-Muslims.

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For this the judge sentenced her to 100 lashes, which will reportedly be carried out when she has recovered from giving birth.

Ms Ibrahim was raised as an Orthodox Christian, her mother’s religion, because her father, a Muslim, was reportedly absent during her childhood.

According to Amnesty International, she was arrested and charged with adultery in August 2013, and the court added the charge of apostasy in February 2014 when she said she was a Christian and not a Muslim.