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.
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.