Iranians remember Amini amid crackdown worries
PARIS: Iranians at home and abroad marked on Saturday the first anniversary of the death in police custody of Mahsa Amini, with activists speaking of a renewed crackdown to prevent any resurgence of the protests that rocked major cities last year.
Amini, a 22-year-old Iranian Kurd, died a few days after she was arrested by religious police for allegedly violating the strict dress code for women, in force shortly after the 1979 revolution. Her family says she died from a blow to the head, but this is disputed by Iranian authorities.
Anger over her death rapidly expanded into weeks of taboo-breaking protests, which saw women tearing off their mandatory headscarves, in an open challenge to the Islamic republic’s system of government under Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, its supreme leader.
But after several months, they lost momentum in the face of a crackdown that saw security forces kill 551 protesters, according to Norway-based Iran Human Rights, and arrest more than 22,000, according to Amnesty International.
Iranian authorities say dozens of security personnel were also killed in what they describe as “riots” incited by foreign governments and hostile media.
Seven men have been executed after being convicted in protest-related cases.
Campaigners say the authorities have renewed their crackdown in the runup to the anniversary, putting pressure on relatives of those killed in the protests in a bid to stop them speaking out.
New York-based Human Rights Watch said family members of at least 36 people killed or executed in the crackdown had been interrogated, arrested, prosecuted or sentenced to prison over the past month.
“Iranian authorities are trying to impose a chokehold on dissent to prevent public commemoration of Mahsa Jina Amini’s death in custody, which has become the symbol of the government’s systematic oppression of women, injustice and impunity,” said Tara Sepehri Far, HRW’s senior Iran researcher.
The two journalists who did the most to publicize the Amini case — Niloufar Hamedi and Elahe Mohammadi who respectively reported from her hospital and funeral — have been held in prison for almost a year. Another reporter, Nazila Maroufian, who interviewed Amini’s father Amjad, has been arrested repeatedly.
Amjad has told Persian media based outside Iran that he plans to hold a commemoration for his daughter in their hometown of Saqez in Kurdishpopulated western Iran.
Outlets, including Prague-based Radio Farda, said he was summoned by intelligence officials after his announcement. He was not arrested, but one of Amini’s uncles, Safa Aeli, was detained in Saqez on September 5.
According to Kurdish-focused news outlet Hengaw, the government has sent additional security forces to Saqez and other towns in western Iran that could become flashpoints.
On Saturday, Hengaw said “repressive forces” were deployed around the Amini family home in Saqez.
It posted photos on the social media platform X, formerly Twitter, showing armed men in fatigues on the streets of Saqez, as well as video of shops shuttered and on strike to mark the anniversary in Saqez, Sanandaj and other cities of Kurdistan province.
‘Doubling down’
While some women are still seen walking in public without headscarves, particularly in wealthy, traditionally liberal areas of northern Tehran, the conservative-dominated parliament is currently considering a draft law that would impose far stiffer penalties for noncompliance.
“The Islamic republic is doubling down on repression and reprisals against its citizens and seeking to introduce new and more draconian laws that severely restrict further the rights of women and girls,” said Sara Hossain, chairman of the United Nations factfinding mission set up to investigate the crackdown.
Under the “Say her name!” slogan, Iranian emigrants are expected to hold commemorative rallies, with large demonstrations expected in Paris and Toronto.
Amnesty International accused Iran’s authorities of committing a “litany of crimes under international law to eradicate any challenge to their iron grip on power,” and lamented that not a single official had been even investigated over Amini’s death or the crackdown.
“The anniversary offers a stark reminder for countries around the world of the need to initiate criminal investigations into the heinous crimes committed by the Iranian authorities under universal jurisdiction,” said Diana Eltahawy, Amnesty’s Middle East and North Africa deputy director.
On the eve of the anniversary, Iran’s archfoe United States and its Western allies, including the United Kingdom and the European Union, imposed new sanctions on Tehran over its protest crackdown.
Announcing the measures, US President Joe Biden led international calls in solidarity with Iranians on the anniversary of Amini’s death.
“Iranians alone will determine the fate of their country, but the United States remains committed to standing with them,” he said.
Iran’s Foreign Ministry spokesman Nasser Kanani slammed the Western countries’“illegal and undiplomatic actions” in a statement on Friday night.
Americas And Emea
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2023-09-17T07:00:00.0000000Z
2023-09-17T07:00:00.0000000Z
https://digitaledition.manilatimes.net/article/281844353237872
The Manila Times
