Naser Navard Gol-Tapeh | Iran

Source: Release Int.

Christian Naser Navard Gol-Tapeh was arrested on 24 June 2016 when 30 intelligence police agents raided an engagement party at a house in the Andisheh township of Karaj, near Tehran. Everyone present was detained, including three visiting Azeri Christians from Baku, Azerbaijan. Most of the Christians were released after questioning and collection of their personal information, but Naser and the Azeris were transferred to Evin prison – some sources suggested that Naser was not released as he was older than the other Christians in the group and was perceived as the leader. 

The four Christians were held in solitary confinement for two months and subjected to intense interrogation. During this time, they were denied consular assistance and legal counsel. They were all charged with ‘illegal gathering, collusion and evangelism’. In September 2016, they were transferred to shared cells in Evin’s Ward 350, and they were temporarily released the following month on bail equivalent to approximately £25,500 each. The three Azeris – Bahram Nasibov, Yusif Farhadov and Eldar Gurbanov – were allowed to leave Iran in November 2016, forfeiting their bail.

 At Naser’s trial in May 2017, Judge Mashallah Ahmadzadeh, head of the 26th branch of the Islamic Revolutionary Court in Tehran, charged him with ‘acting against national security through the formation and establishment of an illegal church organisation in his home’. The court convicted Naser, basing its decision on a Ministry of Intelligence report that allegedly provided evidence that he attempted to undermine national security by establishing an ‘illegal house church network’. The court refused to present the report to Naser’s lawyer Hossein Ahmadi Niaz, who had not been allowed access to any document in his case file. 

On 23 May, Judge Ahmadzadeh sentenced Naser to ten years in prison, and the three Azeris were also sentenced, in their absence, to ten years each in prison. The judgments were not communicated to the four Christians until 12 June. 

Naser appealed against his sentence, but on 12 November, 2017, he lost his appeal at a hearing in the Revolutionary Court in Tehran chaired by Judge Hassan Babaei, in spite of his lawyer providing numerous grounds for his innocence. The three Azeris also appealed and lost, but they are unlikely to be forced to return to Iran to serve their sentence 

Lawyer Hossein Ahmadi Niaz commented, ‘My client has not broken any of the criminal code and is not guilty of his charges. All other Christians arrested with him also confirmed all of their meetings were strictly focused on their faith and worship and nothing else.’ On 20 January, 2018, Naser was admitted to section 8, hall 10 of Evin Prison to serve his ten-year sentence. In recent months Naser has been denied medical treatment for a severe gum infection. He is in great pain, and his family fears he may lose all his teeth if the authorities continue to deny him treatment. 

Prison Address
Evin Prison
Saadat Abad
Tehran
Islamic Republic of Iran

   

Updates
July 2021
Christian prisoner of conscience Nasser Navard Gol-Tapeh has been told his request for conditional release has been rejected.
The news comes as a bitter blow to the Christian convert, who turns 60 in August, having been regularly assured by prison authorities in recent months that his request would be accepted. Nasser is eligible for parole, having served over one third of his 10-years sentence.
 
Since beginning his sentence in Evin Prison in January 2018, Nassar has had three requests for a retrial rejected and has written several open letters querying why his membership of a house church was deemed an “action against national security”.
“Is the fellowship of a few Christian brothers and sisters in someone’s home, singing worship songs, reading the Bible and worshiping God acting against national security?” he asked in one letter.
 
After frequent assurances from prison authorities in recent months, Nasser received a handwritten letter last week from the Tehran prosecutor’s office, informing him that his request had been rejected. There was no explanation for the decision.
 
He has not yet been able to bring himself to tell his elderly mother, with whom he used to live and for whom he was the primary carer before his incarceration. Nasser had shared with her in recent months that he hoped soon to return and to ease the burden on the other relatives who have stepped in to care for her since his imprisonment. But now he must inform her that his, and her, wait, goes on.
 
Nassar has asked for people to pray for him, saying he needs “comfort from the Lord”.

August 2020 In early August, Naser developed symptoms of Covid-19. Despite being ill with fever, the only medical care he received was a few painkillers, and he was not tested. Naser is being held in Evin prison’s overcrowded Ward 8, where twelve out of seventeen prisoners randomly chosen for testing received positive results on 10 August. The same day, over two dozen of Ward 8’s sixty prisoners staged a sit-in to protest about overcrowding, inadequate medical care and insufficient Covid protection measures.

November 2020 Naser was informed that his third petition for a retrial had been rejected.

March 2021 Naser is believed to be in good spirits and really pleased with dental work he received in recent months.

19 March 2021 Naser wrote a poem to celebrate Persian New YearNowruz, which fell on Saturday 20 March.

Prison Address

Prison Address
Evin Prison
Saadat Abad
Tehran
Islamic Republic of Iran

Time in prison:

In prison for 3093 days

Charged with:

acting against national security through the formation and establishment of an illegal church organisation in his home

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