From the BBC:
“Iran protests: Women burn
headscarves in anti-hijab protests”
(A woman stands on top of a car
bonnet and sets her headscarf on fire on 19 September 2022 in central Tehran
during protests for Mahsa Amini)
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. 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, 22, died in
hospital in Tehran on Friday)
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". 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.
^ I hope these protests in Iran
not only continue, but grow larger and larger. The Morality Police in Iran
needs to be disbanded and the violence and discrimination against Women needs
to end. There is little different in what is going on in Iran with that of what
is going on in Afghanistan. ^
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