Protests in Iran after the death of Mahsa Amini
Protests in Iran after the death of Mahsa Amini
She refused to wear a veil while in school, so she was kidnapped, raped and then killed by security forces. This is yet another story of violence that comes fromWillwhere protests against the Ayatollah’s regime have been ongoing for more than three months following the death of 22-year-old Mahsa Amini.
Among the latest victims, there is only a girl of only 14 years, whose fault was not using thehijabs in the classroom. His story was told by the NGO Center for Human Rights and taken up by New York Times in recent days.
After she showed up to school without a headscarf in protest, the girl, whose name is masoomeh and who lived in the poor neighborhood of tehranwas identified by examining the recordings of the surveillance cameras of the institution she attended.
After being arrested, the girl was transferred to the hospital where they were found severe vaginal lacerations and there she died. Also, authored momafter reporting their daughter missing, they lost track.
“In a movement where women are at the center, the barbaric and violent regime has used rape as a weapon to further demolish the morale of the people. They are targeting women in court, for dancing, for singing, for showing a little bit of hair, and now they are violating them in the worst possible way before rob them of their lives”, said the investigative reporter Lisa Daftari.
Violence has become the order of the day in Iran, not just against women and very young girls. In recent days, the stories of some had circulated demonstrators transferred to prison after being arrested and forced to rape themselves in front of guards.
One of them, currently on parole, said: “There was a very tall man, with a balaclava. . On the ceiling, a camera that filmed everything.”
Source: Fan Page IT
John Cameron is a journalist at The Nation View specializing in world news and current events, particularly in international politics and diplomacy. With expertise in international relations, he covers a range of topics including conflicts, politics and economic trends.