Tag: Mahsa Amini

  • Iran protests: 400 people face prison sentence following involvement in Tehran unrest

    400 people detained during anti-government protests have received prison sentences of up to 10 years from Tehran’s courts, a judiciary official reports.

    According to Tehran’s prosecutor general, 80 “rioters” received sentences between two and five years, while 160 received sentences of two years or less, according to the Mizan news agency.

    Without giving further details, Ali Alqasimehr added that another 70 people had been fined.

    It occurs a day after authorities hanged a second man who was found guilty of inciting riots.

    The judiciary announced on Monday morning that Majidreza Rahnavard, 23, had been executed in public in the north-eastern city of Mashhad.

    A Revolutionary Court convicted him less than two weeks ago of the charge of “enmity against God” after finding he had stabbed to death two members of the paramilitary Basij Resistance Force.

    Amnesty International said he was subjected to a sham trial and that the judiciary was “a tool of repression sending individuals to the gallows to spread fear and exacting revenge on protesters daring to stand up to the status quo”.

    Iran has been engulfed by protests against the country’s clerical establishment for almost three months.

    They erupted following the death in custody of Mahsa Amini, a 22-year-old woman who was detained by morality police in Tehran on 13 September for allegedly wearing her hijab, or headscarf, “improperly”.

    Authorities have portrayed the protests as foreign-backed “riots” and responded with lethal force.

    So far, at least 490 protesters, including 68 children and 62 security personnel have been killed during the unrest, according to the Human Rights Activists’ News Agency (HRANA).

    It has also reported the arrest of more than 18,200 people in connection with the protests, of whom 3,780 have been identified.

    Authorities have not revealed how many have been arrested nationwide.

    However, judiciary officials announced in early November that 1,024 people had been charged in connection with the protests in Tehran. They said the suspects were accused of “acts of sabotage”, including “assaulting or martyring security guards” and “setting fire to public property”.

    Last Thursday, authorities in Tehran executed a 23-year-old man convicted of “enmity against God” following what activists said was a grossly unfair trial. Mohsen Shekari was accused of stabbing and wounding a Basij member and blocking a street in the capital in September.

    After Majidreza Rahnavard was hanged on Monday, Amnesty International said it had identified at least 20 other people at risk of execution.

    According to the group, 11 individuals have been sentenced to death, three have undergone trials on capital charges and are either at risk of being sentenced to death or may have already been sentenced, and six may be awaiting or undergoing trial on capital charges.

    The final category includes 26-year-old professional footballer Amir Reza Nasr Azadani, who a judiciary official in Isfahan province said on Sunday had been charged with “baghi”, or “armed revolt”.

    Mr Nasr Azadani is accused of killing three security personnel in the city of Isfahan during protests on 16 November.

    On Monday night, the global football players’ union FIFPRO said it was “shocked and sickened” that he was facing a possible death sentence “after campaigning for women’s rights and basic freedom in his country”.

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    Prominent former Iran national team player Ali Karimi, who has backed the protests, tweeted: “Do no execute Amir.”

    Another former member of the national team, Voria Ghafouri, was arrested last month but was later released on bail.

    Source: Aljazeera.com 

  • World Cup 2022: Iranian protesters celebrate football team’s elimination

    Iran’s anti-government protesters have been celebrating the national football team’s elimination from the World Cup after their 1-0 loss to the United States.

    On Tuesday night, videos showed people dancing in the streets and honking car horns in Tehran and other cities.

    Many Iranians refused to cheer on their national football team in Qatar, seeing it as a symbol of the Islamic Republic.

    The state-run media blamed hostile forces both inside and outside Iran for putting undue pressure on the players.

    In an apparent show of solidarity with the protesters, the players did not sing the national anthem before their first game, a 6-2 defeat by England.

    They did, however, sing during the Wales game, which they won 2-0, and during the politically charged match against the United States.

    Some protesters saw that as a betrayal of their cause even though there were reports that the team came under intense pressure from Iranian authorities.

    The unrest started 10 weeks ago following the death in custody of Mahsa Amini, a 22-year-old woman arrested by morality police in Tehran for allegedly violating the strict rules requiring women to cover their hair with a hijab.

    Authorities have responded to what they have portrayed as foreign-backed “riots” with a violent crackdown in which human rights activists say at least 450 people have been killed, including 60 children. More than 18,000 others are reported to have been arrested.

    A video posted online on Tuesday night appeared to show dozens of people celebrating the Iranian football team’s loss at a square in Mahsa Amini’s home city of Saqqez, in the country’s north-west. They can be heard cheering and waving headscarves before fireworks are set off.

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    BBC Persian also received similar videos from several other cities in the predominantly Kurdish region, where dozens of protesters have reportedly been killed by security forces in recent weeks.

    Crowds were filmed dancing to music in Sanandaj, an epicentre of the unrest, while in Kermanshah and Marivan they were heard chanting “Woman, life, freedom” – one of the main slogans of the protests.

    In Tehran, students at Imam Sadiq University gathered outside a hall of residence and chanted “Death to the dishonourable” – an adjective protesters have used against security forces and which was shouted by fans inside the stadium during Iran’s match against England.

    The opposition activist collective 1500tasvir posted videos that it said showed security forces opening fire at protesters celebrating in the south-western city of Behbahan and beating a woman in Qazvin, near Tehran.

    There was also a confrontation between opponents and supporters of the government outside the Al Thumama Stadium in Qatar after Tuesday’s match.

    Danish journalist Rasmus Tantholdt filmed several men carrying Iranian flags shoving a man wearing a T-shirt saying “Woman, life, freedom” in English. A woman with him is then heard complaining that she attacked and asking for help to leave the stadium safely.

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    Another video obtained by BBC Persian showed a male protester being violently arrested by security guards outside the stadium while shouting “Woman, life, freedom”.

    State-affiliated media in Iran meanwhile praised the national football team despite their failure to qualify for the World Cup’s knockout stages.

    The conservative Farhikhtegan newspaper said “we are proud of Iran”, while the Revolutionary Guards-linked daily Javan said the team had “won the real game: the game of uniting people’s hearts”.

    Keyhan, whose editor is appointed by the supreme leader, said the team had gone into the tournament under “the most unfair conditions”, with pressure from “mercenaries at home and abroad”.

    Before the match, the hard-line Tasnim news agency rejected a report by CNN, which cited an unnamed security source as saying that the Revolutionary Guards had threatened the families of the Iranian players with “imprisonment and torture” if they did not “behave”.

  • Iran protests: Armed Met Police guard Iranian journalists facing death threats

    Armed police officers are stationed in a tree-lined business park in Chiswick, West London. Jankels, black, multi-role armoured vehicles, are stationed at regular intervals alongside Met Police armed response vehicles, which are fully crewed with armed officers inside.

    They are stationed at every entrance to the plate-glass structure that houses the offices of Iran International, an independent Farsi-language news channel that has enraged Iran’s regime.

    “This has to be the biggest armed police operation around a commercial building in this country that I can think of,” says a spokesman for Iran International.

    It is certainly reminiscent of Tony Blair’s deployment of armoured vehicles to Heathrow in February 2003 in response to a perceived terror threat.

    Founded in 2017 by a former BBC Persian journalist, Iran International broadcasts into Iran by satellite. It has been providing 24-hour rolling news coverage of the huge street protests that have engulfed Iran since the death in police custody of 22-year old Mahsa Amini, allegedly arrested for not wearing her hijab head covering correctly.

    Many of the protests have been calling for an end to the oppressive rule of the Islamic Republic.

    But instead of listening to people’s demands, the authorities in Iran have arrested thousands and accused Western nations and the free media they host of stirring up the protests and provoking unrest.

    So far, so familiar. That has been the refrain each time protests in Iran have erupted, but this time it’s different.

    Not only are the protests significantly more widespread, but the Iranian Revolutionary Guards Corps, the real power behind the regime, has been targeting Iranian opposition journalists based in Britain.

    “Iran projects threat to the UK directly, through its aggressive intelligence services,” says Ken McCallum, the director-general of MI5, the UK security service.

    “At its sharpest, this includes ambitions to kidnap or even kill British or UK-based individuals perceived as enemies of the regime. We have seen at least 10 such potential threats since January alone.”

    The Foreign Secretary James Cleverly has called on Iran to stop its intimidation of UK-based journalists. Iran has called the accusations “ridiculous”.

    Working closely with MI5, the Metropolitan Police has responded to the threats with a large show of force to protect the 100 or so employees of Iran International in Chiswick, some of whom have personally received death threats.

    “The Met Police have been outstanding”, the Iran International spokesman tells me as we sit in an office next to their newsroom. “Their response has been swift and effective.”

    So what form do these threats take exactly?

    Initially they were just text messages, sent to the mobile phones of journalists, often warning them that if they don’t stop their critical coverage of the regime then their families and relatives in Iran will suffer.

    That apparently has been going on for years, targeting not just Iran International but BBC Persian as well, to the point where Iran’s behaviour has been raised at the UN.

    But this year Iran has gone further.

    It seems that planning discussions of actual attacks have been intercepted by UK intelligence. There has also been hostile surveillance spotted outside both the offices of Iran International and the homes of some of its staff.

    “We’re talking here about low-grade Tier 3 operatives being hired and directed by Tier 1 operatives,” says the Iran International spokesman.

    “They are easily recruited from drug gangs or from the fringes of an Islamic centre.”

    The hostile surveillance has not always been that sophisticated, he says. One example he gives is of two men and a woman wheeling a pram up and down outside the building on a cold evening while taking photographs – at 11pm.

    “Who takes a baby in a pram for a walk at that time of night?”

    There have also been attempts to interfere, unsuccessfully, with Iran International’s satellite broadcasts, as well as the usual cyber activity.

    He shows me a text from an employee who has just been alerted to attempts to hack into his Twitter account. Then, abruptly, our meeting ends.

    “I’ve got two CTSAs (counter terrorism security advisers) coming in from the Met to discuss what more still needs to be done,” he tells me.

    “This problem is not going away.”

    Source: BBC.com 

  • Taraneh Alidoosti: Prominent Iranian actress poses without a headscarf.

    To show solidarity with anti-government protests, a prominent Iranian actress posted an image of herself without a headscarf on Instagram.

    Taraneh Alidoosti, best known for her role in the Oscar-winning film The Salesman, also held a sign in Kurdish that read “Woman, Life, Freedom.”

    Protesters have adopted the slogan as a rallying cry.

    The protests sparked by Mahsa Amini’s death in police custody are now in their seventh week.

    The 22-year-old died after being arrested by morality police in Tehran for allegedly breaking Iran’s strict rules requiring women to wear a hijab, or Islamic headscarf, to cover their hair.

    Ms Alidoosti is one of Iran’s most successful actresses and has more than eight million followers on Instagram. She starred in The Salesman, which won an Academy Award in 2016 for the Best International Feature Film.

    She has previously vowed to remain inside Iran at any price and has paused her career to support the families of those killed in the security forces’ clampdown on demonstrators.

    Local human rights activists say least 328 people have been killed and 14,800 others have been detained.

    The star’s post is the latest gesture of support by leading figures in the arts and sports of Iran.

    Last month, Iranian star footballer Sardar Azmoun backed demonstrators amid increasing violence from the government. The Bayern Leverkusen forward condemned security forces in an Instagram story, saying: “Shame on you for easily killing the people and viva women of Iran. Long live Iranian women!”

  • Saudis tell US that Iran may attack the kingdom: Officials

    The United States says threats are concerning, and that it will defend Saudi Arabia and other Middle East allies.

    The United States has responded to reports of threats from Iran against Saudi Arabia by saying it is concerned and will not hesitate to respond if necessary.

    “We are concerned about the threat picture, and we remain in constant contact through military and intelligence channels with the Saudis,” the National Security Council said in a statement on Tuesday. “We will not hesitate to act in the defence of our interests and partners in the region.”

    The Wall Street Journal newspaper first reported on Saudi Arabia sharing the intelligence with the US earlier on Tuesday.

    Neither Saudi Arabia nor Iran has commented on the matter publicly.

    Iran has alleged, without providing evidence, that Saudi Arabia and other rivals have been behind anti-government protests that have been ongoing in the country since mid-September.

    In October, the commander of Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps warned Saudi Arabia to tone down coverage of the protests in Iran by Farsi-language satellite news channels, including Iran International, a Saudi-backed satellite television channel based in London.

    “This is our last warning because you are interfering in our internal affairs through these media,” Major-General Hossein Salami said. “You are involved in this matter and know that you are vulnerable.”

    The heightened concerns about a potential attack on Riyadh come as the Biden administration criticises Tehran for its crackdown on the protests and condemned it for sending hundreds of drones – as well as technical support – to Russia for use in its war in Ukraine.

    One of the officials who confirmed the intelligence sharing to the Wall Street Journal described it as a credible threat of an attack “soon or within 48 hours”. No US embassy or consulate in the region has issued alerts or guidance to Americans in Saudi Arabia or elsewhere in the Middle East based on the intelligence. The officials were not authorised to comment publicly and spoke on condition of anonymity.

    Asked about reports of the intelligence shared by the Saudis, Brigadier General Pat Ryder, the Pentagon press secretary, said US military officials “are concerned about the threat situation in the region”.

    “We’re in regular contact with our Saudi partners, in terms of what information they may have to provide on that front,” Ryder said. “But what we’ve said before, and I’ll repeat it, is that we will reserve the right to protect and defend ourselves no matter where our forces are serving, whether in Iraq or elsewhere.”

    US State Department spokesperson Ned Price said America was “concerned about the threat picture,” without elaborating.

    Strained relations

    The latest concerns come at a time of strained relations between Riyadh and Washington after the Saudi-led OPEC+ alliance last month decided to cut oil output targets, which raised fears of a gasoline price spike in the US.

    The US and Saudi Arabia blamed Iran in 2019 for being behind a big attack in eastern Saudi Arabia, which halved the oil-rich kingdom’s production and caused energy prices to spike. The Iranians denied they were behind the attack.

    The Saudis have also been hit repeatedly in recent years by drones, missiles, and mortars launched by the Iran-backed Houthi rebels in Yemen. Saudi Arabia formed a coalition to battle the Houthis in 2015 and has been internationally criticised for its air attacks in the war, which have killed thousands of civilians.

    In recent weeks, the Biden administration has imposed sanctions on Iranian officials for the brutal crackdown on demonstrators after the death of 22-year-old Mahsa Amini in September after her arrest by Iran’s morality police. The administration has also hit Iran with sanctions for supplying drones to Russia for use in its war in Ukraine.

    At least 288 people have been killed and 14,160 arrested during the protests, according to the group Human Rights Activists in Iran. Demonstrations have continued, even as the feared paramilitary Revolutionary Guard has warned Iranians to stop.

    Source: Aljazeera

     

  • Iranian police launch an investigation after a video shows a man being beaten, shot

    Central command says offenders will face legal consequences according to the rules.

    Police in Iran has launched an investigation after a video showed riot police repeatedly kicking and then shooting a man.

    The two-minute clip was posted on social media on Tuesday, in the seventh week of the protests that erupted across Iran after the death of a young woman in custody.

    It shows policemen walking in an alley at night and using their batons to beat a man lying on the ground. The man, whose lower body and feet are visible in the angle of the video, tries to protect his head and body from the hits and kicks.

    The officers in riot gear then leave him on the ground but moments later, another police member arrives and starts beating him with a baton. The final moments of the video, which was shot on a mobile phone from an overlooking building, show a policeman shooting the man at point-blank range with what appears to be a pellet shotgun.

    On Wednesday, the central command of the Iranian police said in a short statement carried by state media that it had launched an investigation to determine the exact time and place of the incident and identify violating officers.

    “The police in no way condones violence and unconventional behaviour and offenders will certainly face legal measures according to the rules,” it said.

    British-based rights group Amnesty International also posted the video on Twitter, calling it “another horrific reminder that the cruelty of Iran’s security forces knows no bounds” and urging the United Nations Human Rights Council to investigate.

    The release of the video comes amid the protests that broke out shortly after the death of Mahsa Amini on September 16.

    The 22-year-old woman died in a hospital in Tehran after collapsing in a “re-education” centre that she had been taken to by the country’s so-called “morality police” following her arrest due to alleged non-compliance with a mandatory dress code. Her family has challenged an official investigation that found she was not beaten and died of pre-existing conditions.

    Dozens of people, including security forces, are believed to have been killed during the protests, but authorities have not published an official tally. Many more have been wounded or arrested, and Iran this week began holding the first court cases for “rioters”.

    The UN has expressed “concern” about developments in Iran, while the United States and Albania are due to hold an informal Security Council meeting on the protests on Wednesday that can be attended by all UN members.

    Iranian officials have denounced the meeting as politically motivated and criticised the special UN rapporteur on human rights in the country for agreeing to brief it.

    In a speech delivered on Wednesday, Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, repeated once again his claim that the United States, Israel, and others have been behind unrest across Iran.

    The events of the past few weeks constitute not only “street riots” but also a “hybrid war”, Khamenei said.

    “Enemies, meaning the US, the Zionist regime (Israel), some insidious and treacherous European powers, and some groups came to the field with everything at their disposal and tried to hurt the nation using their intelligence and media organisations and social media and employing past experiences in Iran,” he added.

    The supreme leader for the first time said some of the many young people who have taken to the streets in the protests were “our own children”, but had been misled and acted as a result of “excitement and feelings, and some carelessness”.

     

  • Mahsa Amini protests: Iran and US set for UN confrontation

    A rare Iranian joint intelligence report reveals that the arrested journalists who reported on Mahsa Amini’s death were trained abroad by the US.

    Tehran and Washington are clashing again over weeks-long protests in Iran, as the US prepares to convene the United Nations Security Council to discuss the unrest sparked by the death of 22-year-old Mahsa Amini in the custody of morality police last month.

    According to Reuters and Iranian state media, the US and Albania, another major critic of the Iranian government, will hold an informal UN Security Council meeting on Wednesday.

    Iranian Nobel Peace Prize laureate Shirin Ebadi and Iranian-born actress and activist Nazanin Boniadi – whom the Iranian state considers to be anti-establishment – will speak at the meeting, along with UN investigator on human rights in Iran, Javaid Rehman, according to Reuters. Other UN member states and rights groups can reportedly attend the meeting as well.

    But while the outlet cited a note outlining the event as saying the meeting will “highlight the ongoing repression of women and girls and members of religious and ethnic groups in Iran”, Tehran has offered a different account.

    The Iranian government’s website, IRNA, on Saturday, cited unnamed “diplomatic sources” as saying Washington is organising the meeting in response to a rare joint report by the Iranian intelligence ministry and the intelligence division of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) late on Friday that blamed the US as the main culprit behind the protests.

    “Instead of responding to the points raised in the Iranian intelligence community, the US is fleeing forward and exhibiting selective support for human rights with specific political goals,” the source was quoted as saying.

    Iran’s mission to the UN made the same point in a statement referring to the US as the “prime suspect of the riots” in Iran.

    “The US and its allies have consistently taken advantage of such a platform (the UN) to advance their political agendas, even at the expense of violating international rules and the UN Charter,” it said, accusing Washington of double standards in supporting Iranians.

    Women and ethnic Kurd and Baluch populations have featured prominently in the protests.

    The commander of the elite IRGC warned protesters on Saturday against taking to the streets. “Do not come to the streets! Today is the last day of the riots,” Hossein Salami said, according to Reuters.

    Iran’s top authorities, including Supreme Leader Ali Hosseini Khamenei, have publicly blamed the US, Israel and others as being the orchestrators of unrest across the country, during which many dozens are thought to have been killed, with more injured or arrested.

    UN spokesman Stephane Dujarric on Friday voiced concern and urged the Iranian authorities to address the “legitimate grievances of the population” while condemning “all incidents that have resulted in death or serious injury to protesters”.

    What’s in the Iranian intelligence report?

    The lengthy joint intelligence report that Tehran claims has motivated the upcoming UNSC meeting paints a picture of accounts that inform Iranian authorities’ stance on the protests.

    According to the report, the US and some of its allies had planned – and delayed – unrest similar to what is happening across Iran right now for a long time, and had designs for different stages prior to, during, and following such unrest.

    The Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) has been at the forefront of the US efforts and has been aided by the intelligence services of Israel, Saudi Arabia, the United Kingdom and other countries, it asserted, citing “completely credible” information.

    The Iranian intelligence community claimed the US has spent billions of dollars over the years to create a network of sympathetic organisations and individuals, holding many gatherings and courses to teach “hybrid wars and soft overthrow” of the Iranian establishment.

    These all-paid courses, it said, have been held in Italy, South Africa, Turkey, and the United Arab Emirates among others, with or without the knowledge of those countries’ governments.

    The report uses the initials of two female Iranian journalists, whom it says were “trained by the courses of the US mafia regime in foreign countries” and “played the role of being the first sources to manufacture news for foreign media” on developments concerning Amini that led to the protests.

    The reporters accused by Iranian intelligence are Niloofar Hamedi and Elaheh Mohammadi, who were arrested shortly after protests broke out last month and remain imprisoned in Evin prison in Tehran. Hamedi was among the first to report on Amini’s death at the hospital, while Mohammadi travelled to Amini’s hometown of Saqqez to report on her funeral.

    The intelligence report also alleges that CIA officials met with Kurdish separatist groups in neighbouring Iraq’s northern Erbil region in late September to ask them to amplify their role in Iran’s unrest. The IRGC in late September and early October repeatedly pounded positions in Iraq’s semi-autonomous Kurdish region to punish the “terrorist groups” it said were based there.

    Foreign-based Persian-language television channels, which Tehran blacklisted this week, and social media platforms like Twitter and Instagram, which have been banned, were also featured in the intelligence report as being influenced and manipulated by Washington in its efforts to counter the Iranian state.

     

     

  • Iran protests: Police fired after clashes in Zahedan

    Two police officers have been fired as a result of the ongoing protests in Iran.

    According to state media, the dismissal was due to “malpractice” by police during clashes in the city of Zahedan on September 30.

    Dozens were killed in those protests, which erupted in response to allegations that a senior police officer had raped a teenage girl.

    Although not directly related, widespread unrest following the death of another young woman in police custody poses a serious challenge to the Islamic Republic.

    Mahsa Amini, 22, died on 16 September.

    She had been detained three days earlier by the morality police in Tehran and fell into a coma after collapsing at a detention centre.

    She was arrested for allegedly wearing her Islamic headscarf “improperly”.

    There were reports that officers had beaten her with a baton and banged her head against a vehicle, but police denied she had been mistreated and said she had suffered a heart attack.

    It is not clear how many people died in the 30 September clashes which have now led to the dismissal of the two senior police officials in the south-eastern city of Zahedan, the capital of Sistan Baluchistan province.

    Some reports by human rights organisations have put the number at more than 80.

    There have been regular protests in the city since then – on Friday security forces were said to have again fired at crowds after prayers at the city’s mosques.

    It is rare for Iranian authorities to sack senior officials involved in suppressing protests against the country’s top leadership.

    Sistan Baluchistan province, which borders both Pakistan and Afghanistan, has a sizeable Sunni Muslim population. Iran is a majority Shia country.

    Authorities have said the security forces were attacked by armed Baluchi separatists – something the imam of the city’s biggest mosque has denied.

    Norway-based Iran Human Rights says at least 234 protesters, including 29 children, have been killed by security forces in crackdowns around Iran so far. Iran’s leaders have portrayed the unrest as “riots” instigated by foreigners.

    Footage posted on social media and verified by the BBC shows widespread recent protests in many cities – an upsurge that came after police reportedly opened fire on protesters in Saqqez, home city of Ms Amini, on Wednesday, 40 days after she died.

    The BBC and other independent media are banned from reporting from inside Iran, making state media and other reports hard to verify. Authorities have also heavily disrupted the internet, hampering the ability of protesters to post on social media.

    The Islamic Republic of Iran has seen protests before. But not like this.

    The authorities are still trying to dismiss and discredit them as “rioters influenced by foreigners”.

    It’s hard to square that with extraordinary images of teenage schoolgirls rejecting obligatory headscarves, and of women of all ages walking bare-headed in public spaces.

    It’s hard, too, to see Iran returning to days where so-called morality police can police women’s dress the way they’ve done for decades.

    This is now about more, much more than what women wear.

    In the past, major uprisings have fizzled out or were forcibly suppressed, after months of unrest. But, with every week, this wave seems to strengthen.

    The full force of Iran’s security apparatus has yet to be unleashed. The authorities will do whatever it takes to preserve the Islamic Republic.

    But Iran’s protesters, especially a new generation of women and men, also seem ready to do whatever it takes to change their lives, and much more.

     

  • Iran accuses ‘Great Satan’ US of inciting chaos and violence 

    President Raisi has joined Supreme Leader Khamenei in condemning the United States for inciting fatal protests over the death of a woman in government custody.

    Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi accused US President Joe Biden of “inciting disorder” after expressing sympathy for protests against the murder of Mahsa Amini, who died in Iranian government custody nearly a month ago.

    The protests started in mid-September after Amini, 22, died following three days in the custody of Iran’s “morality police” for allegedly violating the strict dress code for women.

    “The remarks of the American president – who is inciting chaos, terror, and the destruction of another country – serve as a reminder of the eternal words of the founder of the Islamic Republic who called America the Great Satan,” Raisi said, referring to the late Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomenei.

    “The enemy’s plot must be countered by effective measures to resolve people’s problems,” Raisi said, according to a statement from the president’s office.

    Dozens of people have died in the protests. Most have been protesters, but members of the security forces have also died. Hundreds of demonstrators have been arrested.

    On Friday, Biden said, “We stand with the citizens, the brave women of Iran.”

    “It stunned me what it awakened in Iran,” the US president said. “It awakened something that I don’t think will be quieted for a long, long time.”

    Iranian foreign affairs spokesman Nasser Kanani said on Sunday, “Iran is too strong for its will to be swayed by the interference … of a politician tired of years of failure.”

    “We will together defend the independence of Iran,” Kanani wrote on Instagram.

    The US issued new sanctions against Iranian officials on October 6 over what it called the “violent suppression of protests”.

    The US Treasury last month also placed sanctions on the morality police.

    Raisi accused the United States of starting unrest in the past, saying because of “the failure of America in militarisation and sanctions, Washington and its allies have resorted to the failed policy of destabilisation”.

    This month, Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei blamed the US and Israel for instigating the protests, accusing them of trying to stop Iran’s “progress”.

     

  • Four convicts were killed in a fire at Tehran’s Evin prison, according to state media

    According to the country’s judiciary, at least four prisoners were killed and 61 others were injured after a fire broke out overnight at Tehran’s Evin prison following a dispute between convicts, according to the official state news agency IRNA.IRNA reported smoke inhalation was the cause of the deaths, with 10 convicts hospitalized and four in “critical condition.”

    The facility mostly holds political prisoners, including Iranians with dual nationality. Families of about two dozen political prisoners have called to say they are unharmed, according to their accounts on social media.

     

    The prison has long been criticized by Western rights groups and was blacklisted by the United States government in 2018 for “serious human rights abuses”.

     

    The incident took place as nationwide protests over the death in detention of Mahsa Amini, a 22-year-old Iranian woman, entered the fifth week.

     

    The protests have posed one of the most serious challenges to the Iranian government since the 1979 revolution, with demonstrations spreading across the country and some people chanting slogans against Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

    State TV on Sunday aired footage of the fire’s aftermath, showing scorched walls and ceilings in a room it said was the upper floor of a sewing workshop at the prison. Tehran prosecutor Ali Salehi said the prison unrest was not related to the nationwide protests and the situation was peaceful after the incident.

    The fire started at about 10 pm (6.30 pm GMT), Al Jazeera’s Resul Sardar said, adding that it involved different units of the prison.

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    Damage caused by a fire inside the building of the Evin prison [IRNA via AFP]

    “Officials here say there were clashes between prisoners and that some of those prisoners have set the fire in the warehouse, in the sewing workshop of the prison,” Sardar said, referring to a statement made earlier by Tehran Governor Mohsen Mansouri.

     

    “However some witnesses are saying that some Molotov cocktails were thrown into the prison and that they started the fire. Right after that, we have seen security forces firing and also using tear gas to disperse people,” he added.

    A witness contacted by the Reuters news agency said roads leading to Evin prison have been closed to traffic. “There are lots of ambulances here,” he said. Another witness said families of inmates gathered in front of the main prison entrance. “I can see fire and smoke. Lots of special forces,” the witness said.

     

    A security official said calm had been restored at the prison, while IRNA reported that “the situation is currently completely under control”. But the first witness told Reuters that ambulance sirens could be heard and smoke still rose over the prison.

    Early on Sunday, IRNA carried a video it said showed parts of the prison damaged by fire. Firefighters were seen dousing the debris with water, apparently to prevent the blaze from reigniting.

    ‘Numb with worry’

    The detainees include French-Iranian academic Fariba Adelkhah and US citizen Siamak Namazi, whose family said he was taken back into custody this week after a temporary release.

    Reacting to reports of the fire, Namazi’s family said in a statement to the AFP news agency shared by their lawyer that they were “deeply concerned” and had not heard from him.

     

    They urged Iran’s authorities to grant him “immediate” means to contact his family and to give him a furlough “as he clearly isn’t safe in Evin Prison”.

    The sister of another US citizen held at Evin, businessman Emad Shargi, said in a Twitter post his family was “numb with worry”.

     

    An unnamed Iranian official told the Tasnim news agency that none of the political prisoners was involved in Saturday’s unrest.

    “No security prisoner was involved in today’s clash between prisoners, and basically the ward for security prisoners is separate and far from the wards for thieves and those convicted of financial crimes,” the official was quoted as saying.

    Asked about the prison fire, US President Joe Biden told reporters during a campaign trip to Portland, Oregon: “The Iranian government is so oppressive.”

    He said he was surprised by “the courage of people and women taking [to] the street” in the recent protests and had enormous respect for them. “It’s been really amazing,” he added. “They’re not a good group, in the government.”

     

    US Department of State spokesman Ned Price tweeted, “We are following reports from Evin Prison with urgency. We are in contact with the Swiss as our protecting power. Iran is fully responsible for the safety of our wrongfully detained citizens, who should be released immediately.”

     

    Human Rights Watch has accused the prison authorities of using threats of torture and indefinite imprisonment, as well as lengthy interrogations and denial of medical care for detainees.

    Protests erupted after the September 16 death of Amini, who was arrested by Iran’s morality police for wearing an improper hijab. She died in custody. A coroner’s report said she did not suffer blows to the head or vital organs.

     

    Amini’s family has refuted the official accounts that attributed the 22-year-old’s death to conditions arising after a brain tumour surgery at age eight.

    Although the unrest does not appear close to toppling the government, the protests have widened into strikes that have closed shops and businesses, touched the vital energy sector, and inspired brazen acts of dissent against Iran’s religious rule.

     

    On Saturday, protesters across Iran chanted in the streets and in universities against the country’s religious leaders.

     

    A video posted by the Norway-based organisation Iran Human Rights purported to show protests in the northeastern city of Mashhad, Iran’s second-most populous city, with demonstrators chanting “Clerics, get lost”, and drivers honking their horns.

     

    Videos posted by the group showed a strike by shopkeepers in the northwestern Kurdish city of Saqez – Amini’s hometown. Another video on social media showed female high school students chanting “Woman, Life, Freedom” on the streets of Sanandaj, the capital of Kurdistan province.

    The authenticity of the videos could not be verified immediately.

     

    The Iranian activist news agency HRANA said online that 240 protesters had been killed in the unrest, including 32 minors. It said 26 members of the security forces were killed, and nearly 8,000 people had been arrested in protests in 111 cities and towns and some 73 universities.

     

    But the official death toll is much lower than estimated by rights groups and protesters.

     

    Among the casualties have been teenage girls whose deaths have become a rallying cry for more demonstrations demanding the downfall of Iran’s government.

     

    Protesters called on Saturday for demonstrations in the northwestern city of Ardabil over the death of Asra Panahi, a teenager from the Azeri ethnic minority who, activists alleged, was beaten to death by security forces.

     

    Officials denied the report and news agencies close to the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps quoted her uncle as saying the high school student had died of a heart problem.

     

     

  • Iran protests: Outrage over police sex assault video

    A video showing Iranian anti-riot forces sexually assaulting a female demonstrator while attempting to arrest her has sparked outrage on social media.

    Users expressed their fury, with many demanding “justice” and the resignation of the police chief. Some pro-government users condemned the perpetrators as well.

    Despite blocks on some social media tools, Iranians are still managing to share powerful images of the protests.

    The country has been rocked by the most intense unrest in decades.

    The protests erupted last month when anger over the death in police custody of 22-year-old Kurdish Iranian Mahsa Amini boiled over. Officials say she died from an underlying health condition, but her family says she died after being beaten by the morality police.

    Numerous videos of the protest have gone viral both inside and outside of Iran. This latest video, which happened in Tehran’s Argentina Square on Wednesday, shows a group of officers in protective gear and helmets surrounding a woman on the main road.

    One of them grabs her by the neck and leads her into a crowd of about two dozen police, many of whom are on motorcycles.

    While the woman is being forced towards one of the bikes, another officer approaches her from behind and puts his left hand on her bottom.

    The woman then crouches on the ground as more officers surround her. A female voice behind the camera is heard saying: “They are pulling her hair.”

    Drivers in vehicles next to where it is happening start sounding their horns, a form of protest in similar situations seen in the past few days across the country.

    The woman, who appears to have no hijab or headscarf, is then seen standing up and running away from the scene.

    At this point, the same voice on the clip is heard saying: “Look at him [the security force officer], he is laughing”.

    The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.View original tweet on Twitter

    The footage has been verified by the BBC’s Persian service.

    Tehran’s Police Public Relations office has said the incident is being investigated, state news agency Irna reported.

    The police statement does not give details of what happened, but says that “enemies using psychological warfare tried to cause public anxiety and incite violence”.

    The fact that the incident happened in public has led human rights activists to question what security forces might also be doing behind closed doors.

    “Have you brought out the harassment of the girls of this land from [your] prisons into the open streets with the aim to shout out [at us] in public your obscenity, lechery and filth?” posted a social media user by the name of Atefeh.

    Mistreatment, including sexual and psychological abuse, has been reported by many inmates, especially political prisoners, for years.

    Many Iranians commented on social media that the video from Tehran had made them more determined to go out on the streets to protest, with one person saying they intended “to put their anger and fury into action”.

     

  • Iran protests: Germany requests sanctions in response to the brutal repression

    The foreign minister of Germany has demanded that perpetrators behind Iran’s harsh crackdown on demonstrators be brought to justice.

    According to Annalena Baerbock Germany, would see to it that the EU froze assets and enforced entry restrictions.

    She referred to those on “the wrong side of history” as those who “beat up ladies and girls on the street.”

    EU foreign ministers are expected to decide on sanctions on 17 October, according to Reuters news agency.

    Speaking to a German newspaper, Baerbock also criticised those who “condemn to death people who want nothing other than to live free”.

    She told Iranians: “We stand by you, and will continue to do so.”

    The proposed sanctions come after the death of Mahsa Amini sparked demonstrations throughout the country.

    The 22-year-old died in custody after being detained by Iran’s morality police on 16 September.

    Dozens of Iranians have lost their lives after taking to the streets to protest Ms Amini’s death.

    The Iran Human Rights group, based in Norway, said at least 185 people – including 19 children – had died since the unrest began.

    Iran’s state media say 20 members of the Islamic Revolution Guard Corps, police, and security forces have been killed.

    Videos and images circulating on social media over the weekend appeared to show Iran’s security services entering schools and universities.

    Female students at a university in Tehran were reported to have chanted “get lost” to President Ebrahim Raisi when he visited on Saturday.

    Saturday also saw the country’s state television channel hacked.

    Viewers saw a mask appear on their screens followed by an image of the supreme leader, Ayatollah Khamenei, surrounded by flames.

    Many in Iran are now calling for the end of Islamic clerical rule.

     

     

  • Protests in Iran: State-run live TV hacked by protesters

    Iran’s state-run broadcaster was apparently hacked on air Saturday, with a news bulletin interrupted by a protest against the country’s leader.

    A mask appeared on the screen, followed by an image of Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei with flames around him.

    The group called itself “Adalat Ali”, or Ali’s Justice.

    It comes after at least three people were shot dead when protesters clashed with security forces in new unrest over the death of Mahsa Amini.

    Ms Amini was detained in Tehran by morality police for allegedly not covering her hair properly. The 22-year-old Iranian Kurd died in custody on 16 September, three days after her arrest.

    Her death has sparked an unprecedented wave of protest across the country.

    Saturday’s TV news bulletin was interrupted at about 18:00 local time with images which included Iran’s supreme leader with a target on his head, photos of Ms Amini and three other women killed in recent protests.

    One of the captions read “join us and rise up”, whilst another said “our youths’ blood is dripping off your paws”.

    The interruption lasted only a few seconds before being cut off.

    Such displays of rebellion against Ayatollah Ali Khamenei are historically rare, and he wields almost complete power within Iran. But following Ms Amini’s death, there has been some open dissent.

    Also on Saturday, social media videos emerged which seemed to show female students at a university in Tehran chanting “get lost” during a visit by President Ebrahim Raisi.

    Earlier in the day, two people were killed in Sanandaj, including a man shot in his car after he sounded his horn in support of protesters. A video shared online also showed a woman shot in the neck lying unconscious on the ground in Mashhad.

    In Sanandaj, a police official said a man had been killed by “counter-revolutionaries”, the state-run news agency IRNA reported.

    On Friday, Iran’s Forensic Medicine Organisation said Ms Amini had died from multiple organ failure caused by cerebral hypoxia – and not from blows to the head, as her family and protesters contend.

    Rights groups say more than 150 people have been killed since the protests in the Islamic Republic began on 17 September.

    Shops in several cities have shut in support of the protesters, including in Tehran’s bazaar where some set fire to a police kiosk and chased the security forces away.

    The protests reaching the bazaar in Tehran will ring alarm bells with Iranian leaders who have counted the merchants as among their supporters.

    Source: BBC

  • EU parliament speech: Swedish MEP cuts her hair in solidarity with Iranian women after Mahsa Amini’s death

    Following the passing of Mahsa Amini, a Swedish MEP cut off her ponytail while speaking in the EU assembly in a gesture of solidarity with Iranian women.

    Women around the world have been taking to social media over the last few weeks to share their hair-cutting videos since the news of Miss Amini’s death emerged.

    Protests in Iran began after the 22-year-old died while in the custody of the country’s morality police.

    She was accused of breaking laws that require women to cover their hair with a hijab.

    She was accused of breaking laws that require women to cover their hair with a hijab.

    Iraqi-born MEP Abir Al-Sahlani was talking about the oppression of women in Iran during the assembly meeting in Strasbourg.

    “Until the women of Iran are free, we are going to stand with you.”

    She ended her speech by saying “Jin, Jiyan, Azadi” – Kurdish for “Woman, Life, Freedom” – as she snipped off her ponytail and held it up.

    Iran requires women to wear the hijab so that it covers their hair completely.

    Miss Amini collapsed at a police station and died three days after she was arrested for wearing it too loosely.

    Iranian police say she died of a heart attack and was not mistreated, but her family have cast doubt on that account.

    Thousands of women across the world have been cutting their hair – a movement now spreading to celebrities, politicians, and campaigners.

    French actresses, including Juliette Binoche, Marion Cotillard, and Isabelle Huppert, have also taken part.

    58-year-old Binoche, who has appeared in films such as The English Patient, Chocolat, and Godzilla, was seen in video footage clipping off a handful of her hair and declaring: “For freedom.”

    In the video posted by soutienfemmesiran (Support for Women of Iran), text was shown that read: “Mahsa Amini was abused by the morality police until death followed.

    “All she stood accused of was wearing her veil in an inappropriate manner.

    “She died for having a few locks of her hair exposed.”

    Last week Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe cut her hair to show her support for the women of Iran.

    The British-Iranian citizen, who spent six years in jail in Iran, recorded a video of herself taking a pair of scissors to her hair.

     

  • Iran protests: Supreme Leader accuses US and Israel of inciting unrest

    In his first public remarks on the unrest, Iran’s supreme leader blamed the US and Israel for the anti-government rallies sweeping the nation.

    Ayatollah Ali Khamenei claimed that Qurans had been destroyed and said that “riots” had been “manufactured” by Iran’s fiercest foes and friends.

    Additionally, he urged security forces to be prepared to handle any future unrest.

    The protests – the biggest challenge to his rule for a decade – were sparked by the death in custody of a woman.

    Mahsa Amini, 22, fell into a coma hours after being detained by morality police on 13 September in Tehran for allegedly breaking the strict law requiring women to cover their hair with a hijab, or headscarf. She died three days later.

    Her family has alleged that officers beat her head with a baton and banged her head against one of their vehicles. The police have said there is no evidence of any mistreatment and that she suffered “sudden heart failure”.

    Women have led the protests that began after Ms Amini’s funeral, waving their headscarves in the air or setting them on fire to chants of “Woman, life, freedom” and “Death to the dictator” – a reference to Ayatollah Khamenei.

     

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    Addressing a graduation ceremony of police and armed forces cadets on Monday, the supreme leader said Ms Amini’s death “broke our hearts”.

    “But what is not normal is that some people, without proof or an investigation, have made the streets dangerous, burned the Quran, removed hijabs from veiled women and set fire to mosques and cars,” he added, without mentioning any specific incidents.

    The ayatollah, who has the final say on all state matters, asserted that foreign powers had planned “rioting” because they could not tolerate Iran “attaining strength in all spheres”.

    “I say clearly that these riots and the insecurity were engineered by America and the occupying, false Zionist regime [Israel], as well as their paid agents, with the help of some traitorous Iranians abroad.”

    He also gave his full backing to the security forces, saying that they had faced “injustice” during the unrest.

    Iran Human Rights, a Norway-based group, said on Sunday that at least 133 people had been killed by security forces so far. They include 41 protesters whom ethnic Baluch activists said had died in clashes in Zahedan on Friday.

    State media have reported that more than 40 people have been killed,including security personnel.

    Ayatollah Khamenei’s comments came a day after security forces violently cracked down on a protest by students at Iran’s most prestigious science and engineering university, reportedly arresting dozens.

    The BBC’s Kasra Naji says the gunfire heard around the campus of Sharif University of Technology in Tehran on Sunday night spread fear among many Iranians that authorities had decided to make an example of the students.

    Security forces tried to the enter the campus, but the students drove them back and closed all the entrance gates.

    But, our correspondent adds, a siege developed and the students who tried to leave through an adjacent car park were picked up one by one and beaten, blindfolded and taken away.

    In one video posted on social media, a large number of people are seen running inside a car park while being pursued by men on motorbikes.

    The siege was lifted later in the night following the intervention of professors and a government minister.

    On Monday, students at the university announced that they would not go back to classes until all of their fellow students had been released from detention. The university meanwhile said it had moved classes online, citing “the need to protect students”.

    Protests were also reported at several otheruniversities around the country.

     

  • Spate of shootings: Police fear serial killer may be on loose in California

    Police investigating five fatal shootings in California believe a serial killer might be on the loose in the state.

    Detectives released a grainy image of a “person of interest” after the latest killing shortly before 2 am on Tuesday.

    The surveillance footage image shows an individual from behind who is dressed all in black, with a black hat.

    Stockton Police have said they could be a suspect or a witness.

    Rewards totalling $85,000 (£76,000) are being offered for information leading to an arrest after the shootings.

    Stockton Police Chief Stanley McFadden said the latest victim was a 54-year-old man, who was shot dead in a residential area.

    He was the fifth man fatally shot since 8 July within a radius of a few square miles in Stockton.

    A top Iranian official has urged security forces to deal with protesters harshly as videos emerged of people running down a street while gunfire rang out.

    Some of the most serious protests in the country for years have been taking place over the past two weeks following the death of Mahsa Amini.

    A top Iranian official has urged security forces to deal with protesters harshly as videos emerged of people running down a street while gunfire rang out.

    Some of the most serious protests in the country for years have been taking place over the past two weeks following the death of Mahsa Amini.

  • Iran is coping with its worst challenge in years

    The most significant challenge Iran’s leadership has faced in recent years is the outbreak of nationwide protests that followed the murder in police custody of a 22-year-old Kurdish woman held for allegedly breaking hijab (headscarf) laws.

    While authorities say Mahsa Amini died from underlying health reasons, her family and countless other Iranians believe she died as a result of having been beaten.

    Protesters say that if they don’t act now, they could fall victim to the same fate.

    It has come at a time when Iranians are feeling particularly fed up. Systematic corruption among Iran’s political elite, growing poverty with inflation at more than 50%, deadlock in nuclear talks, and lack of social and political freedom have left Iran’s young and vibrant population feeling hopeless.

    According to Iran’s Social Security Organization Research Institute, at least 25 million Iranians were living below the poverty line by June 2021. That number is even higher now.

    These are not the first protests in the history of the Islamic Republic of Iran. But many observers believe there is something different about them.

    More than anything, this is a woman’s protest.

    ‘Society has shifted’

    Civil liberties groups continually spotlight the suppression of women in Iran, an entire part of society who have been the biggest losers of the Islamic revolution of 1979.

    Iranian women were forced to wear hijabs (headscarves) soon after the revolution and have lost many of their rights, including the right to travel, the right to work, and the right to child custody over the age of seven. There was little objection to these changes from men at the time.

    “The fact that many men are joining the protests shows that the society has shifted to more progressive demands,” says Mehrdad Darvishpour, an Iranian sociologist based in Sweden.

    The main slogan of protesters is “Woman, Life, Freedom”, a call for equality and a stance against religious fundamentalism.

    Also, these protests are far more inclusive than the previous ones.

    The so-called Green Movement of 2009 saw the middle class protest against alleged election fraud. Although it was large in size, it centered on major cities. Other major protests in 2017 and 2019 were confined to poorer areas.

    But the current protests are now being reported in both middle-class and working-class areas. They seem to have moved from local or ethnic issues to more inclusive ones.

    “We are witnessing the birth of a mega-movement,” says Mr Darvishpour.

    A movement that was being led by women but has managed to bring other movements together. And more importantly, the symbolic value of burning hijabs, has cracked the image of an unbreakable regime.

    According to Mr Darvishpour, there is no going back from this experience.

    Government’s options

    The establishment is in a very difficult place. The death of Mahsa Amini has even shaken some of the hardcore supporters of the government.

    Many of them, including some clerics, are questioning the violent tactics that are being used by morality police against women.

    So, the government has two options: To change its strict hijab rules, which are part of the identity of the Islamic republic. But doing so may encourage protesters to continue until they reach their final demand for regime change.

    Or not to change anything and continue the violent crackdown and killing of protesters, which may briefly calm down the unrest but will only add fuel to their ever-growing anger.

    Many of the riot police that is now suppressing the protests are also suffering from economic difficulties and are not necessarily supportive of the establishment.

    If these protests continue they might switch sides.

    On top of that, the Supreme Leader’s 83 years of age and his ill health is on the mind of many Iranians on both sides.

    It’s unclear whether whoever succeeds him will be able to sustain the support of the regime’s hardcore supporters or not.

    This might not be the final chapter, but it is a very important one.

    Lives are being lost, but more cracks are appearing in a system that is no longer working for many angry Iranians who want a different way of life.

  • Mahsa Amini: Women in Turkey protest death

    In an effort to draw attention to the death of Mahsa Amini, 22, while in the custody of the Tehran police on Wednesday, a group of Iranian residents of Istanbul and residents of Turkey assembled in front of the Iranian Consulate in Istanbul.

    The activity was observed from a distance by Istanbul police, who on Tuesday repeatedly dispersed groups assembled in Taksim Square.

    During the demonstration, at least three women cut their hair to protest the treatment of Amini, who was detained by Iran’s morality police because she didn’t wear her headscarf correctly and therefore her hair was showing. She later died while in custody.

    Protesters shouted slogans in Persian, Turkish and Kurdish. The Turkish chants included, “We do not keep silent, we do not fear, we do not obey,” and “My body, my decision.”

    The Persian and Kurdish slogans included, “Women live freely” and “We do not want a mullah regime.”

    Banners carried by the group of about 300 people included harsh criticism against Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khamenei and the Iranian regime.

    Mahdi Sağlar, one of the Iranians who participated in the protest, has been living and working in Turkey for 20 years.

    “They beat a girl to death because her hair was showing,” Sağlar told VOA Turkish. “Their own children dress as they want in Europe and America, they behave as they want, but in Iran, they arrested her because her hair is out, and they killed her by causing a brain hemorrhage with a blow to the brain at the police station. We are here to protest this. Our citizens in Iran are protesting here on the street as well.”

    Gelare Abdi, another Iranian protester, said that although she loves her homeland very much, she can’t live in her country due to heavy pressure.

    “I need freedom,” she said. “But I have no freedom in Iran. I have been here in Turkey for two years out of necessity. … They killed Mahsa because her hair was showing a small forelock. She was just 22 years old. I am also a woman and I want freedom.”

  • Iran protests: Mahsa Amini’s death draws attention to morality police

    The death of 22-year-old Mahsa Amini after she was detained by Iran’s so-called morality police has sparked angry protests, with women burning their headscarves in a defiant act of resistance against the Islamic Republic’s strict dress code and those enforcing it.

    The Gasht-e Ershad (Guidance Patrols) are special police units tasked with ensuring the respect of Islamic morals and detaining people who are perceived to be “improperly” dressed.

    Under Iranian law, which is based on the country’s interpretation of Sharia, women are obliged to cover their hair with a hijab (headscarf) and wear long, loose-fitting clothing to disguise their figures.

    Ms Amini allegedly had some hair visible under her headscarf when she was arrested by morality police in Tehran on 13 September. She fell into a coma shortly after collapsing at a detention centre and died three days later in hospital. The force denied reports that officers beat her head with a baton and banged it against one of their vehicles.

    In a rare interview, one morality police officer spoke anonymously to the BBC about his experience working in the force.

    “They told us the reason we are working for the morality police units is to protect women,” he said. “Because if they do not dress properly, then men could get provoked and harm them.”

    He said they worked in teams of six, comprising four men and two women, and focused on areas with high foot traffic and where crowds gather.

    “It’s weird, because if we are just going to guide people why do we need to pick somewhere busy that potentially means we could arrest more people?”

    “It’s like we are going out for a hunt.”

    The officer added that his commander would tell him off or say he was not working properly if he did not identify enough people violating the dress code, and that he found it particularly difficult when people resisted arrest.

    “They expect us to force them inside the van. Do you know how many times I was in tears while doing it?”

    “I want to tell them I am not one of them. Most of us are ordinary soldiers going through our mandatory military service. I feel so bad.”

    Post-revolutionary decree

    The Iranian authorities’ fight against “bad hijab” – wearing a headscarf or other mandatory clothing incorrectly – began soon after the 1979 Islamic Revolution, a major aim of which was to make women dress modestly.

    While many women were doing so at the time, miniskirts and uncovered hair were not uncommon sights on the streets of Tehran before the pro-Western Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi was overthrown. His wife Farah, who often wore Western clothing, was held up as an example of a modern woman.

    Women protesting in Iran in March 1979 with their hair uncovered
    IMAGE SOURCE,GETTY IMAGES Image caption, The anti-hijab protests that erupted in Iran in March 1979 carried on for several days

    Within months of the founding of the Islamic Republic, the laws protecting women’s rights that had been established under the Shah began to be repealed.

    “It didn’t happen overnight, it was a step-by-step process,” said Mehrangiz Kar, 78, a human rights lawyer and activist who helped organise the first anti-hijab protest.

    “Right after the revolution there were men and women on the streets offering out free headscarves to women wrapped in gift paper.”

    A group of women protest against wearing the Islamic veil, while waving their veils in the air outside the office of the Prime Minister, Tehran, Iran, 6th July 1980
    IMAGE SOURCE,GETTY IMAGES Image caption, Women were waving headscarves in the air in resistance in the earlier anti-hijab protests of the 1980s

    On 7 March 1979, the leader of the revolution, Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, decreed that hijabs would be mandatory for all women in their workplaces and that he considered uncovered women to be “naked”.

    “That speech was received by many revolutionaries as an order to force the hijab on women’s heads,” said Mrs Kar, who is now based in Washington DC. “Many thought this was going to happen overnight, so women started resisting.”

    They responded immediately. More than 100,000 people, mostly women, gathered in the streets of Tehran the following day – International Women’s Day – to protest.

    ‘We got creative’

    Despite Ayatollah’s Khomeini’s decree, it took some time for authorities to decide what was considered “proper” clothing for women.

    “There were no clear instructions, so [they] came up with posters and banners showing models, which were hung on office walls. They said women should follow these instructions [about wearing a hijab] or they cannot enter,” explained Mrs Kar.

    Woman holding hijab above her head
    IMAGE SOURCE,BBC PERSIAN Image caption, Pictures posted after Mahsa Amini’s death showed women taking off their headscarves in a nod to the earlier protests
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    By 1981, women and girls were legally required to wear modest “Islamic” clothing. In practice this meant wearing a chador – a full-body cloak, often accompanied by a smaller headscarf underneath – or a headscarf and a manteau (overcoat) covering their arms.

    “But the fight against the mandatory hijab continued on individual levels. We were creative in wearing the headscarf or not covering our hair properly,” Mrs Kar said.

    “Every single time they were stopping us, we were fighting.”

    In 1983, parliament decided that women who did not cover their hair in public could be punished with 74 lashes. More recently, it added the punishment of up to 60 days in prison.

    Authorities have nevertheless struggled to enforce the laws since then, and women of all ages are frequently seen pushing the boundaries in public by wearing tight-fitting, thigh-length coats and brightly coloured headscarves pushed back to expose plenty of hair.

    Heavy-handed approach

    The extent to which these rules have been enforced and the severity of punishments handed down have varied over the years according to which president has been in power.

    The ultra-conservative then-mayor of Tehran, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, sought to appear more progressive on the issue when he was campaigning for the presidency in 2004. “People have different tastes, and we have to serve them all,” he said in a television interview.

    An Iranian morality policewoman walks past police vehicles ahead of a crackdown on women violating Iran's Islamic dress code in Tehran, Iran (23 July 2007)
    IMAGE SOURCE,AFP Image caption, Gasht-e Ershad officers have been accused of verbally and physically harassing women

    But soon after his election victory the following year, the Gasht-e Ershad were formally established. Until then, the dress codes had been policed informally by other law enforcement and paramilitary units.

    The morality police are often criticised by the public for their heavy-handed approach, and women are frequently detained and only released when a relative appears to provide assurances they will adhere to the rules in the future.

    “I was arrested with my daughter when we were stopped because of our lipstick,” one woman from the central city of Isfahan told the BBC.

    “They took us to the police station and asked my husband to come and sign a piece of paper that he would not let us out without a hijab.”

    Iranian newspapers on sale in Tehran show photographs of Mahsa Amini on 18 September 2022
    IMAGE SOURCE,WANA NEWS AGENCY Image caption, Questions about Mahsa Amini’s death dominated the front pages of Iranian newspapers on Sunday

    Another woman, from Tehran, told the BBC that a female officer said her boots could be “too erotic” for men and detained her.

    “I called my husband and asked him to bring me a pair of shoes,” she said.

    “I then signed a paper admitting I was wearing inappropriate clothing and I now have a criminal record.”

    Other reports of experiences with the morality police, which have been shared with the BBC, include beatings and more cruel and unusual punishments.

    One woman said the police threatened to put cockroaches on her body during one of her arrests.

    New crackdown

    President Ebrahim Raisi, a hard-line cleric who was elected last year, signed an order on 15 August to enforce a new list of restrictions.

    They included the introduction of surveillance cameras to monitor and fine unveiled women or refer them for “counselling”, and a mandatory prison sentence for any Iranian who questioned or posted content against the hijab rules online.

    Iran's President Ebrahim Raisi speaks at a news conference in Tehran (29 August 2022)
    IMAGE SOURCE,REUTERS Image caption, President Ebrahim Raisi issued a decree in August further curtailing women’s freedom of dress

    The restrictions led to an increase in arrests but also sparked a surge in women posting photos and videos of themselves without headscarves on social media – something that has only intensified in the days following Ms Amini’s death.

    Masih Alinejad, a journalist and activist now based in the US, says the protests which have erupted since the death of Ms Amini feel deeply personal.

    Over the years, she has run several viral campaigns against the hijab laws, including #mystealthyprotest and many, including the government, see her as an instrumental force behind the current unrest.

    Women began removing their headscarves and waving them in the air at Ms Amini’s funeral in western city of Saqez on Saturday.

    Source: CNN

     

  • Mahsa Amini: Protests over woman’s death claim more lives in Iran

    Nine people are now reported to have been killed at protests in Iran sparked by the death of a woman detained for allegedly breaking strict hijab rules.

    Among those reported killed is a 16-year-old boy, shot dead when security forces opened fire on protesters.

    The unrest has spread to more than 20 major cities, including the capital Tehran.

    Videos posted online from Wednesday’s unrest showed women waving their headscarves in the air or burning them.

    “No to the headscarf, no to the turban, yes to freedom and equality!” protesters were heard chanting at a demonstration in Tehran.

    The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.View original tweet on Twitter
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    In an address to the UN General Assembly, US President Joe Biden said Americans stood with “the brave women of Iran who right now are demonstrating to secure their basic rights”.

    The hard-line Shia Muslim cleric accused them of “double standards”, citing the discovery of unmarked graves of indigenous children in Canada and the treatment of the Palestinian people.

    Mahsa AminiImage source, Mahsa Amini family
    Image caption,

    Mahsa Amini, 22, died in hospital in Tehran on Friday

    Mahsa Amini, a 22-year-old Kurdish woman from the north-western city of Saqez, died in hospital on Friday, after spending three days in a coma.

    She was visiting the capital Tehran with her family when she was arrested by morality police, who accused her of violating the law requiring women to cover their hair with a hijab and their arms and legs with loose clothing. She collapsed after being taken to a detention centre to be “educated”.

    There are reports that officers beat Ms Amini’s head with a baton and banged her head against one of their vehicles.

    • Who are Iran’s morality police?
    • Fury as woman dies after Iran morality police arrest

    The police have denied that she was mistreated and said she suffered “sudden heart failure”. But her family has said she was fit and healthy.

    Acting UN human rights chief Nada al-Nashif called on Tuesday for prompt, independent and impartial investigation into Ms Amini’s death.

    She noted that her office had received “numerous, and verified, videos of violent treatment of women” by morality police, who have stepped up their enforcement of hijab rules in recent months.

    Ms Nashif also expressed alarm at “the reported unnecessary or disproportionate use of force” against the thousands of people who have taken in part in protests since Mahsa Amini died.

    The death toll comes from Kurdish rights groups, who blamed security forces.

    There has been no confirmation of the deaths from the authorities, but a prosecutor told the Tasnim news agency that two people were killed by “anti-revolutionary elements” on Tuesday.

    The state-run Irna news agency said a police assistant died of injuries he sustained in violent clashes with protesters in Shiraz on Tuesday.

    Internet-monitoring group NetBlocks meanwhile reported that access to Instagram, one of the last available social media platforms in Iran and one used by people to circulate pictures and footage of the protests, had been restricted. The internet service has already been disrupted in Kurdistan province, Tehran and other parts of the country for several days.

    Source: BBC

  • Iran protests: Women burn headscarves in anti-hijab protests

    Female protesters have been at the forefront of escalating protests in Iran and have been burning headscarves, after the death in custody of a woman detained for breaking hijab laws.

    Demonstrations have continued for five successive nights, and reached several towns and cities.

    Mahsa Amini died in hospital on Friday after spending three days in a coma.

    In Sari, north of Tehran, large crowds cheered as women set their hijabs alight in defiant acts of protest.

    Ms Amini was arrested in the capital last week by Iran’s morality police, accused of breaking the law requiring women to cover their hair with a hijab, or headscarf, and their arms and legs with loose clothing.

    She fell into a coma shortly after collapsing at a detention centre.

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    There were reports that police beat Ms Amini’s head with a baton and banged her head against one of their vehicles, Acting UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Nada al-Nashif said.

    The police have denied that she was mistreated and said she suffered “sudden heart failure”. Ms Amini’s family has said she was fit and healthy.

    The 22-year-old was from Kurdistan Province in western Iran, where three people were killed on Monday as security forces opened fire on protesters.

    Mahsa Amini
    Image source, Mahsa Amini family. Image caption, Mahsa Amini, 22, died in hospital in Tehran on Friday

    “Mahsa Amini’s tragic death and allegations of torture and ill-treatment must be promptly, impartially and effectively investigated by an independent competent authority, that ensures, in particular, that her family has access to justice and truth,” Ms Nashif said.

    She noted that the UN had received “numerous, and verified, videos of violent treatment of women” as morality police expanded their street patrols in recent months to crack down on those perceived to be wearing “loose hijab”.

    “The authorities must stop targeting, harassing, and detaining women who do not abide by the hijab rules,” she added, calling for their repeal.

    An aide to Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei paid a visit to Ms Amini’s family on Monday and told them that “all institutions will take action to defend the rights that were violated”, state media reported.

    Senior MP Jalal Rashidi Koochi publicly criticised the morality police, saying the force was a “mistake” as it had only produced “loss and damage” for Iran.

    What are Iran’s hijab laws?

    Following the 1979 Islamic Revolution, authorities in Iran imposed a mandatory dress code requiring all women to wear a headscarf and loose-fitting clothing that disguises their figures in public.

    Morality police – known formally as “Gasht-e Ershad” (Guidance Patrols) – are tasked, among other things, with ensuring women conform with the authorities’ interpretation of “proper” clothing. Officers have the power to stop women and assess whether they are showing too much hair; their trousers and overcoats are too short or close-fitting; or they are wearing too much make-up. Punishments for violating the rules include a fine, prison or flogging.

    In 2014, Iranian women began sharing photos and videos of themselves publicly flouting the hijab laws as part of an online protest campaign called “My Stealthy Freedom”. It has since inspired other movements, including “White Wednesdays” and “Girls of Revolution Street”.

    Ms Nashif also condemned “the reported unnecessary or disproportionate use of force” against the thousands of people who have taken in part in protests against the morality police and the hijab since Mahsa Amini’s death.

    Hengaw, a Norway-based organisation that monitors human rights in predominantly Kurdish areas, said 38 people were injured on Saturday and Sunday when riot police fired live ammunition, rubber bullets and tear gas at protests in Saqez and Sanandaj, the capital of Iran’s Kurdistan province.

    The group reported that three male protesters were shot and killed in clashes with security forces on Monday – one in Saqez and two others in the towns of Divandarreh and Dehgolan – as the unrest escalated. It had previously reported the death of a second man in Divandarreh, but relatives said he was in a critical condition in hospital.

    In Tehran, videos posted online showed women taking off their headscarves and shouting “death to the dictator” – a chant often used in reference to the Supreme Leader. Others shouted “justice, liberty, no to mandatory hijab”. In the northern province of Gilan, protesters also clashed with police.

    A woman who took part in a protest on Monday night in the northern city of Rasht sent BBC Persian photographs of what she said were bruises she suffered as a result of being beaten by riot police with batons and hoses.]

    “[The police] kept firing tear gas. Our eyes were burning,” she said. “We were running away, [but] they cornered me and beat me. They were calling me a prostitute and saying I was out in the street to sell myself.

    Another woman who protested in the central city of Isfahan told the BBC’s Ali Hamedani: “While we were waving our headscarves in the sky I felt so emotional to be surrounded and protected by other men. It feels great to see this unity. I hope the world supports us.”

    Tehran Governor Mohsen Mansouri tweeted on Tuesday that the protests were “fully organised with the agenda to create unrest”, while state TV alleged that Ms Amini’s death was being used as an “excuse” by Kurdish separatists and critics of the establishment.

    Source: BBC

     

  • Anti-hijab demonstrations: UN alarm as Iran cracks down on anti-hijab protests

    Concern over the Iranian government’s handling of demonstrations caused by the death in detention of a woman being held for violating hijab laws has been expressed by the UN.

    As men, women, and children took to the streets of Kurdistan province for a fourth day on Monday, security personnel reportedly opened fire, killing three people, according to human rights organizations.

    Tehran also saw demonstrations.

    The UN urged Iran’s leaders to allow peaceful demonstrations and launch an impartial probe into the woman’s death.

    Mahsa Amini, a 22-year-old ethnic Kurd from the western city of Saqez, died in hospital on Friday after spending three days in a coma.

    She was with her brother in Tehran on Tuesday when she was arrested by the morality police, who accused her of breaking the law requiring women to cover their hair with a hijab, or headscarf, and their arms and legs with loose clothing. She fell into a coma shortly after collapsing at a detention centre.

    Acting UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Nada Al-Nashif said there were reports that Ms Amini was beaten on the head with a baton by morality police officers and that her head was banged against one of their vehicles.

    The police have denied that she was mistreated and said she suffered “sudden heart failure”. But her family has said she was fit and healthy.

    Mahsa Amini
    IMAGE SOURCE, MAHSA AMINI FAMILY Image caption, The acting UN rights chief called for Mahsa Amini’s family to get “access to justice and truth”

    “Mahsa Amini’s tragic death and allegations of torture and ill-treatment must be promptly, impartially, and effectively investigated by an independent competent authority, that ensures, in particular, that her family has access to justice and truth,” Ms Al-Nashif said.

    She noted that the UN had received “numerous, and verified, videos of violent treatment of women” as morality police expanded their street patrols in recent months to crack down on those perceived to be wearing “loose hijab”.

    “The authorities must stop targeting, harassing, and detaining women who do not abide by the hijab rules,” she added, calling for their repeal.

    An aide to Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei paid a visit to Ms Amini’s family on Monday and told them that “all institutions will take action to defend the rights that were violated”, state media reported.

  • Mahsa Amini: Women remove their headscarves in protest

    At the funeral of a woman who passed away after being detained by Iran’s morality police, protests erupted.

    Mahsa Amini, 22, passed away on Friday, days after Tehran police vehemently disputed claims that she had been abused in a police van by eyewitnesses there.

    According to reports, several of the attendees of the ceremony took off their hijabs in opposition to the need that they do so.

    Funeral goers shouted “death to the tyrant,” and films later showed police opening fire on a gathering.

    The funeral was held in Saqez, Ms. Amini’s hometown in Kurdistan’s western province.

    According to videos published on social media, locals gathered very early in the morning to prevent Iranian security forces from rushing through the burial in secret to avoid protests.

    Reports suggested that some angry protesters marched toward the local governor’s office to protest the death. According to videos received and verified by the BBC Persian Service, the security forces opened fire on protesters.

    There were also reports of injuries and arrests. In videos published on Twitter, security forces can be seen guarding the governor’s office and arresting protesters trying to get close to the building.

    A picture of Ms Amini’s gravestone was published on social media. It reads: “You didn’t die. Your name will be a code [rallying call].”

    Ms Amini was arrested on Tuesday by the morality police for allegedly not complying with the strict dress code on head coverings.

    According to eyewitnesses, she was beaten while inside a police van and slipped into a coma later.

    Iranian police denied the allegations, saying she had “suffered a sudden heart failure”.

    Ebrahim Raisi, Iran’s hardline president, has asked the ministry of the interior to launch an investigation into the death.

    Kasra Hospital in Northern Tehran said in a statement that Ms Amini was admitted on 13 September showing “no vital signs”.

    The statement was later removed from the hospital’s social media after hardline social media accounts accused hospital staff of being “anti-regime agents”.

    Iranian TV also aired CCTV footage of Ms Amini under arrest. Human rights activists accused state TV of censoring the footage to create a false story.

    According to Netblocks, a watchdog organization that monitors cybersecurity and internet governance, the internet connection has been disrupted in various locations in Iran since news of Ms Amini’s death came out, including in the capital, Tehran, and Saqez.

    Many users said they could not upload videos on Instagram or send content over WhatsApp.

    Iranian state-controlled Sharq newspaper reported that Tehran’s very low internet speed disrupted the stock market on Saturday.

    There were also reports of injuries and arrests. In videos published on Twitter, security forces can be seen guarding the governor’s office and arresting protesters trying to get close to the building.

    A picture of Ms Amini’s gravestone was published on social media. It reads: “You didn’t die. Your name will be a code [rallying call].”

    Ms Amini was arrested on Tuesday by the morality police for allegedly not complying with the strict dress code on head coverings.

    According to eyewitnesses, she was beaten while inside a police van and slipped into a coma later.

    Iranian police denied the allegations, saying she had “suffered a sudden heart failure”.

    Ebrahim Raisi, Iran’s hardline president, has asked the ministry of the interior to launch an investigation into the death.

    Kasra Hospital in Northern Tehran said in a statement that Ms Amini was admitted on 13 September showing “no vital signs”.

    The statement was later removed from the hospital’s social media after hardline social media accounts accused hospital staff of being “anti-regime agents”.

    Iranian TV also aired CCTV footage of Ms Amini under arrest. Human rights activists accused state TV of censoring the footage to create a false story.

    According to Netblocks, a watchdog organization that monitors cybersecurity and internet governance, the internet connection has been disrupted in various locations in Iran since news of Ms Amini’s death came out, including in the capital, Tehran, and Saqez.

    Many users said they could not upload videos on Instagram or send content over WhatsApp.

    Iranian state-controlled Sharq newspaper reported that Tehran’s very low internet speed disrupted the stock market on Saturday.