A Sudanese
Christian woman who was sentenced to death for renouncing Islam, then acquitted
after intense international pressure on Khartoum, arrived on Thursday in Rome
with her family en route to the United States.
Meriam
Yahia Ibrahim Ishag was greeted on the tarmac by Italian Prime Minister Matteo
Renzo and his wife as well as Foreign Minister Lapo Pistelli.
"Today
is a day of celebration", Renzi said.
A global
outcry erupted in May after Ishag was sentenced under Sharia law to 100
lashings and then to hang for apostasy.
Days after
her conviction, she gave birth to a second child in prison.
Ishag's
conviction was overturned in June, but she was immediately rearrested while
trying to leave Sudan using what prosecutors claimed were forged documents.
Two days
later, Ishag was released from prison and she and her family -- including her
American husband and two young children -- took refuge in the US embassy.
Ishag was
born to a Muslim father who abandoned the family, and was raised by her
Ethiopian Orthodox Christian mother, according to the Roman Catholic
Archdiocese of Khartoum which said she joined the Catholic church shortly
before she married.
Ishag was
convicted under Islamic Sharia law that has been in force in Sudan since 1983
and outlaws conversions which are punishable by death.


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