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Iranian high school girl who did not wear hijab dies after 6 days of brain death

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Moral police suspected of assault in subway
One year after Amini’s mysterious death… Possibility of resumption of protests

Women drag Armita Geravand, a 17-year-old girl who fell unconscious in the Tehran subway, out of the train on the 1st. Tehran = AP Newsis

Armita Geravand (17), a high school girl who was suspected to have fallen into a coma after being assaulted by Iran’s so-called ‘morality police’ after riding the subway without wearing a hijab, died on the 28th. As with the case of Martha Amini, a Kurdish woman in her 20s who died for similar reasons last September, suspicions that the authorities are trying to cover up the incident have not subsided.

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Closed-circuit (CCTV) footage released by Iranian authorities only shows Geravand getting on a subway car with friends without a hijab on the 1st of this month, and being lifted out in an unconscious state a short time later. Authorities allege he collapsed from low blood pressure and hit his head on a metal structure in the process. However, suspicions were heightened by not disclosing the video inside the train, which was key evidence. Geravand was declared brain dead on the 22nd, three weeks later, and eventually died.

On the other hand, international human rights groups such as Hengau believe that the cause of death was assault by moral police. In Iran, a theocratic country, strong sanctions are imposed on those who do not wear the hijab properly, as it is a violation of Islamic law. The moral police are responsible for this task.

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Immediately after Amini’s death, anti-government protests continued throughout Iran for a long time, protesting his death and calling for an investigation into the truth. According to the British Financial Times (FT), many young women protested against Amini’s death and refused to wear hijab in public places. Accordingly, in recent months, morality police have been deployed heavily in the Tehran subway to crack down on non-wearing of the hijab. Congress also passed a bill last month that could result in up to 10 years in prison for women who refuse to wear the hijab. Considering this, we cannot rule out the possibility that nationwide anti-government protests condemning Geravande’s death will resume, as they did during Amini’s time.

Source: Donga

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