Three dead during protests in Iran

Three people were killed during protests in Iranian Kurdistan sparked on Saturday by the death of a young woman in the custody of vice police, an official said on Tuesday.

Mahsa Amini, 22, from the Kurdistan region (northwest), was arrested by morality police on September 13 in Tehran, where she was visiting with her family, for “wearing inappropriate clothes”. In Iran, covering your hair is compulsory in public.

Mahsa Amini fell into a coma after her arrest and died on September 16 in hospital, according to state television and her family.

Activists claim she suffered a head injury while in custody. Iranian police have dismissed the charges, and an investigation has been opened.

A wave of anger

The death of the young woman sparked a wave of anger in Iran, where demonstrations broke out on Saturday in Kurdistan, then in Tehran and in other regions of the country.

On Tuesday, the governor of Kurdistan, Ismail Zarei Koosha, quoted by the Fars news agency, reported “three deaths” that occurred during the demonstrations in different localities of the province, without specifying a date.

He described the deaths as “suspicious, part of a plot fomented by the enemy”. He also claimed that one of the victims was killed by a type of weapon not used by Iranian forces.

Critics are on the rise

Faced with the anger caused by this death, the representative of Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei in Kurdistan, Abdolreza Pourzahabi, went to the family home of Mahsa Amini on Monday, according to the Tasnim agency.

The envoy told the family that “measures will be taken” and that Ayatollah Khamenei was “pained” by the death. “As I promised the Amini family, I will follow the case to the end,” he said.

Abroad, the UN’s acting high commissioner for human rights, Nada Al-Nashif, expressed “her concern over the death in custody of Mahsa Amini […] and the violent reaction of the security forces to the demonstrations”, and called for an “impartial” and “independent” investigation.

The death of the young woman also provoked criticism from senior Iranian officials against the morality police. In Parliament, MP Jalal Rashidi Koochi, quoted by the ISNA agency, indicated that the morality police “cause damage to the country”. More radical, the parliamentarian Moeenoddin Saeedi announced his intention to propose the complete abolition of this force.

“I believe that due to the ineffectiveness of the Gasht-e Ershad in conveying the culture of the hijab, this unit should be abolished, so that the children of this country will not be afraid when they come across this force,” said said Moeenoddin Saeedi.

For the Organization for the Promotion of Virtue and the Prevention of Vice, an influential organization affiliated with the Iranian state, “we must stop arresting and prosecuting people who wear their veils incorrectly because this has the effect of increasing social tensions. The law must be amended so that it is considered only as an offence”.

On Sunday, police made arrests and fired tear gas into Kurdistan to disperse hundreds of protesters.

Protests took place on Monday in Tehran, notably in several universities, and in Mashhad, the second largest city in the country, according to the Fars and Tasnim agencies.

Tehran Governor Mohsen Mansouri said the protests were “organized for the sole purpose of creating unrest”.

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