“I went to court today and was told that the verdict has been
cancelled,” Mahmoud Alizadeh Tabatabayi said, quoted by Fars news
agency.
The Revolutionary Court “has to examine the case again and issue a new verdict.”
Taheri, who has no religious training, founded a spiritual movement
and practised alternative medicine, following what he presented as
spiritual messages.
After a brief arrest in 2010, he was rearrested in May 2011 and held
in solitary confinement. He was sentenced to death in June for
“insulting Islamic sanctities” and “corruption on earth”.
In August, the UN’s High Commissioner for Human Rights, Zeid Ra’ad Al Hussein, called for the immediate release of Taheri.
In a message posted on Facebook in the same month, Alizadeh said his
client “does not deny any of the principles of Shia Islam and firmly
believes in them and observes them.”
Taheri apologised to the Revolutionary Court and said he was prepared
to recant his beliefs if the authorities believed his thoughts deviated
from Islam’s teaching, according to the lawyer.
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