Politics & Government

Pittenger worked for 2 1/2 years to win Iran’s release of Idaho pastor

Naghmeh Abedini holds a necklace with a photograph of her husband, Saeed Abedini, on Capitol Hill in Washington in June 2015. Iran state television has reported that the government has released several dual-national prisoners. The Associated Press has confirmed that three of them were Washington Post reporter Jason Rezaian, former U.S. Marine Amir Hekmati and pastor Saeed Abedini.
Naghmeh Abedini holds a necklace with a photograph of her husband, Saeed Abedini, on Capitol Hill in Washington in June 2015. Iran state television has reported that the government has released several dual-national prisoners. The Associated Press has confirmed that three of them were Washington Post reporter Jason Rezaian, former U.S. Marine Amir Hekmati and pastor Saeed Abedini. AP

WASHINGTON North Carolina Rep. Robert Pittenger, whose efforts to win freedom for an Idaho minister included appeals to President Barack Obama and Pope Francis, said he is “deeply grateful and thrilled” over Iran’s release of Pastor Saeed Abedini as part of a broad prisoner swap.

Abedini, who converted from Islam to Christianity, had traveled to Iran in 2012 on a mission to build an orphanage. But he was detained in July 2012 on charges of evangelizing and sentenced to eight years in prison. The judge said Abedini’s activities were “threatening the national security of Iran.”

The United Nations Human Rights Council declared in August 2013 that Abedini’s imprisonment was “arbitrary” and violated the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, of which Iran is a signatory.

Pittenger got involved a month later as evangelicals across the country, including two in North Carolina, sought to galvanize support for Abedini’s release. The Republican congressman was approached by Pastor David Chadwick of the Forest Hill Church in Charlotte and by the Rev. Franklin Graham, son of evangelist Billy Graham.

Pittenger organized at least three bipartisan letters signed by dozens of members of Congress to Obama and Secretary of State John Kerry. During Pope Francis’ recent speech to a joint session of Congress, Pittenger escorted Abedini’s wife, Naghmeh Abedini, to the House chamber as his guest, but efforts to arrange a meeting with a senior Vatican official were unsuccessful.

Pittenger also introduced a bipartisan House resolution charging that Saeed Abedini had been “arbitrarily detained, tortured and held in solitary confinement because he is a Christian.”

Abedini’s two children back home in Idaho, it said, “are growing up without their daddy.”

After Abedini’s release, coinciding with the lifting of global sanctions against Iran, Pittenger said: “We are all deeply grateful and thrilled at the release of Pastor Abedini. Certainly, this has been a long, difficult road for Naghmeh, her children, and Saeed. Let’s celebrate and then remember to keep praying as Pastor Abedini recovers from the injuries he suffered in prison and transitions back to family life.”

Rejoining his family may present challenges. In two emails made public in November, Naghmeh Abedini publicly accused her husband of struggling with “demons” that led to sexual abuse involving pornography, though she later expressed regrets for doing so.

In Boise, Pastor Bob Caldwell of Calvary Chapel, Abedini’s congregation, was met with a standing ovation Saturday night when he announced in church that Saeed Abedini had been released.

Naghmeh Abedini said she woke her children up first thing Saturday to tell them the news.

“The children are excited. They’re beside themselves,” she said. “They keep asking me, ‘When are we going to see him?’”

Caldwell said the Calvary Chapel congregation wants to help Naghmeh and Saeed Abedini “in healing their own relationship.”

“They have things they got to work out, but that’s what a church is,” he said. “We’re all working stuff out. We’re to be healers, not destroyers.”

Some Republicans in Congress were critical of the prisoner exchange, saying that Obama had shown weakness by granting clemency to seven Iranians charged with violating U.S. trade sanctions against Iran and dismissing charges against 14 other Iranians, all outside the United States, whose pursuit was unlikely to result in their extradition.

Jamie Bowers, a spokesman for Pittenger, said the congressman “is extremely grateful that the American hostages have been freed. He wouldn’t trade that for anything. But he feels that if President Obama had played his cards right, this could have happened two years ago.”

Pittenger said: “I wish we could trade our negotiators for theirs, because they obviously have the upper hand.”

Erin Fenner of the Idaho Statesman contributed to this report.

This story was originally published January 17, 2016 at 3:05 PM with the headline "Pittenger worked for 2 1/2 years to win Iran’s release of Idaho pastor."

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