Sunday Star-Times

Fears Saudi secret police are snatching Christian converts from New Zealand

Two Saudi Arabian asylum seekers at opposite ends of the country have suddenly flown home, and friends are convinced they have been forcibly repatriate­d because they’d turned their backs on Islam. and investigat­e.

- Blair Ensor Tony Wall

A HALF- EATEN chop rots in a frying pan on a stove. Packaged food spills out of a pantry. Elsewhere: electrical appliances, spartan furniture, towels, clothing.

Someone has left this council flat in the Christchur­ch suburb of Redwood in a hurry.

No-one has seen or heard from the tenant, Saudi refugee Khalid Muidh Alzahrani, known as Daniel, for three weeks, and the council has applied for an abandonmen­t order for the property.

Alzahrani, 42, suffered polio as a child, uses a walking stick and a wheelchair, and has other serious health problems.

He arrived Christchur­ch about five years ago on a Saudi Government scholarshi­p to study English, moved to Dunedin after the earthquake­s and then returned to Christchur­ch, converting to Christiani­ty and applying for asylum. He was granted refugee status on the grounds that he would be persecuted in Saudi Arabia, and told friends he was terrified he would be kidnapped and forced to return.

The Saudi ambassador to New Zealand told the Sunday StarTimes Alzahrani had ‘‘insisted’’ on returning home to visit his mother and the consulate had paid for his air ticket. But his friends don’t believe it – they say he was last seen in the company of two strange Arab men and believe he was taken out of the country under duress, possibly by agents of the state or family members.

Police state that they are not treating the case as a kidnapping at this stage, but have reached out via Interpol to make sure that Alzahrani is OK.

People who convert from Islam to Christiani­ty are known as MBBs – Muslim Background Believers –

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The evidence suggests he was kidnapped... and we suspect they were agents of the state, but there may have been a family involvemen­t. Roger Chambers

and some members of the MBB community in Christchur­ch have gone into hiding, fearing they too will be targeted.

One source said Saudi government agents were planted among the thousands of students who came to New Zealand each year to study, to ensure their behaviour did not bring ‘‘ shame’’ on the Kingdom or their families.

In Saudi Arabia it is against the law for Muslims to abandon their faith, and Christians and other religious minorities are subjected to discrimina­tion, harassment, detention and in rare cases torture and death.

There have been numerous documented cases of Saudi nationals being uplifted from foreign countries. In 2012, columnist Hamza Kashgari, who’d been accused of insulting the prophet Mohammad on Twitter, tried to seek asylum in New Zealand but was intercepte­d in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, sent home and jailed without trial.

In May last year, a young Saudi Christian who had arrived in Auckland two months earlier and claimed asylum was snatched off the street by three men just three days before his refugee interview and was flown back to Saudi Arabia, where it is believed he spent time in prison and was tortured. His lawyer, Roger Chambers, said the man had managed to secretly make contact with his friends in Auckland.

‘‘He has had a dreadful time in Saudi Arabia,’’ Chambers said. ‘‘[He was told] more than once if he did not renounce his Christiani­ty that he could expect to be beheaded.’’

In Christchur­ch, an elderly neighbour said the last time he saw Alzahrani was about three weeks ago, leaving in a white, fourdoor car with two men ‘‘ who weren’t New Zealanders’’.

Alzahrani’s GP alerted police when he failed to turn up to a medical appointmen­t. Immigratio­n New Zealand confirmed that Alzahrani left the country on July 31 but refused to say if he was travelling alone.

Police said they were satisfied he had left voluntaril­y.

‘‘However, due to Mr Alzahrani’s ongoing health issues, police have made a request . . . to the Saudi Arabian authoritie­s to enquire as to his welfare,’’ they said in a statement.

Saudi

Ambassador

Ahmed

Al- Johani said in a statement Alzahrani had ‘‘insisted’’ he wanted to return home, ‘‘so we provided him with a ticket as he requested’’. He left New Zealand on a Cathay Pacific flight via Hong Kong and had ‘‘safely arrived to his family’’.

Al- Johani released health records from two-and-a-half years ago when Alzahrani had sought help from the consulate because he could not afford his medical bills. ‘‘We offered Mr Alzahrani all the help and support he needed.’’

The Star-Times understand­s that was before Alzahrani sought asylum. Al- Johani ignored other questions about Saudi Arabia’s stance on Christian converts.

Members of the Christian community in Christchur­ch who were providing Alzahrani with financial support to supplement his invalid’s benefit are upset with the police response to their complaint. They have tried repeatedly to reach Alzahrani, without success.

They said his dream was to bring his two young daughters to New Zealand. It was out of character for him to disappear without telling his friends, they said.

‘‘Daniel made it very clear that he would never return to the Middle East as it was too dangerous for him as a Christian,’’ a friend said.

‘‘He shared many times that he was fearful of abduction.’’

A source said Alzahrani’s brother had visited Christchur­ch a few months ago and given him an air ticket to return to Saudi. He had refused to take it.

‘‘The fear of his brother visiting caused him to have very bad nightmares about being killed in his flat.’’ the source said. ‘‘He felt in a very dark place and was irrational at times. Why would a man like this want to go back into the lion’s den?’’

A source familiar with Saudi asylum-seekers said that when a family member converted, ‘‘religious police’’ would visit the family and give them a deadline to sort it out themselves.

‘‘ Often the oldest son will be sent to get them and bring them home and re-indoctrina­te them.’’

In the Auckland case, it is believed one of the three men who snatched the asylum-seeker was his brother. A source said the other two were travelling on diplomatic passports and were captured on CCTV footage at Auckland airport.

Chambers said his client had been so worried about the possibilit­y of being kidnapped and forcibly returned home that he changed his name by deed poll and applied for asylum on religious persecutio­n grounds.

His conversion had ‘‘outraged’’ his family.

The Star-Times has been told he was married to a member of the wealthy, influentia­l bin Laden constructi­on family.

After he disappeare­d his friends searched his flat in Grafton, central Auckland, and found all his clothes and belongings still there, including credit cards.

Chambers said New Zealand officials met the man when his plane landed in Hong Kong, but he indicated he was returning voluntaril­y and was allowed to proceed.

‘‘There was considerab­le doubt as to whether that was a voluntary statement. The evidence suggests he was kidnapped . . . and we suspect they were agents of the state, but there may have been a family involvemen­t.’’

He had written to Immigratio­n Minister Michael Woodhouse seeking help in the case, and hoped that the man could be returned to New Zealand to resume the asylum process.

‘‘I am really concerned. If we can do something to rescue him I’d very much want that. Any New Zealander would be horrified, it’s appalling.’’

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 ?? Photos: John Kirk-Anderson/FairfaxNZ, Reuters ?? Different worlds: Friends of Christian convert Khalid Muidh Alzahrani fear the refugee has been abducted from his Christchur­ch flat and taken back to Saudi Arabia – home to the Islamic holy city of Mecca – where it is against the law for Muslims to...
Photos: John Kirk-Anderson/FairfaxNZ, Reuters Different worlds: Friends of Christian convert Khalid Muidh Alzahrani fear the refugee has been abducted from his Christchur­ch flat and taken back to Saudi Arabia – home to the Islamic holy city of Mecca – where it is against the law for Muslims to...

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