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Iran Arrests ‘Mothers For Justice’ Ahead Of Hijab Protests

Maryam Sinaiee
Maryam Sinaiee

Iran International

Jul 11, 2022, 20:07 GMT+1Updated: 17:33 GMT+1
A group 'Mothers for Justice' with pictures of their children killed by security forces during protests
A group 'Mothers for Justice' with pictures of their children killed by security forces during protests

One day before a planned anti-hijab protest, Iran’s security arrested families of the victims of the 2019 protests accusing them of “trying to instigate riots”.

Security forces raided the home of Rahimeh Yousefzadeh in Tehran on Monday and arrested her and two other mothers whose children were killed by the government during anti-government protests. Yousefzadeh is the mother of Navid Behboudi who was shot dead by security forces in Tehran in November 2019.

Several others, including Nahid Shirpisheh, the mother of Pouya Bakhtiari, and the brother of Vahid Damvar, another victim of government violence, were arrested at their own homes, also on Monday.

The mothers of the victims of government violence have come to be known collectively as ‘Mothers for Justice’. Many among these mothers are usually referred to in reports and on social media by their dead children’s names. In the past few years, they have tried to keep the memory of their loved ones alive while also relentlessly calling for justice for them.

Authorities normally respond to the mothers’ calls for justice with accusations, harassment and even prison.

Quoting an ‘informed source’, the IRGC-linked Fars News agency on Monday confirmed the arrest of an unspecified number of activists by the intelligence ministry during a private meeting. The report dubbed the activists as “insurgents who pretend to seek justice”, a clear reference to Mothers for Justice.

Fars also reported that a foreign national who allegedly gave money to the accused has been arrested in a separate operation.

Fars accused the activists of “establishing contact with a foreign secret service” and receiving money from them to “instigate riot and insecurity in the country under the guise of seeking justice.”

Many believe that the arrests are a preemptive measure against a planned anti-hijab protest on Tuesday.

The ‘Morality Police’ have recently been harshly cracking down on ‘bad-hijab women’ and some officials have ordered extra measures, including to government offices, banks, and public transportation authorities to deny service to ‘bad-hijab’ women.

Authorities have also planned ‘hijab rallies’ at stadiums and other venues on Tuesday (July 12) “to honor, celebrate, and promote” the Islamic notion of the hijab (cover) for women.

Activists, including some of the ‘Mothers for Justice’ have called on women to take action against compulsory hijab on the same day including dropping their headscarves in the streets and other public places. The campaign has been dubbed as the ‘NO2Hijab’.

“They arrested Nahid Shirpisheh because they knew she would come to the street without hijab and many other women would follow her lead,” Mahtab Ghorbani, a France-based poet and activist tweeted. In a video shared on social media last week, Shirpisheh supported the anti-hijab movement and urged everyone to join it.

On Monday a middle-aged woman removed her headscarf in the main square of the city of Tonekabon in the northern province of Mazandaran and protested against compulsory hijab by shouting “freedom” and waving her headscarf over her head. Passers by came to her rescue and freed her when police tried to arrest her and whisk her away.

Crackdown on activists has spiked in the past few days. Security forces on Monday arrested the award-winning film director Jafar Panahi as he was protesting the detention of two dissident filmmakers, Mohammad Rasoulof and Mostafa Al-e Ahmad, at Tehran’s Evin prison.

Rasoulof, Alehahmad and prominent reformist politician Mostafa Tajzadeh who is an outspoken critic of Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei’s policies were also arrested last week.

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Jul 11, 2022, 19:10 GMT+1

Croatian football (soccer) manager Dragan Skocic has been dismissed as Iran’s head coach with little more than four months to the World Cup finals in Qatar. 

Iran's state news agency IRNA reported on Monday that Iran's football federation had decided to dismiss the 53-year-old, adding that "there are unconfirmed reports that several Iranian candidates have a good chance to replace Skocic."

Skocic, who took over from Marc Wilmots as coach in February 2020, secured the Iranians a spot at the World Cup by topping their qualification group ahead of South Korea. He won 15 of his 18 games in charge but has lost two of his last three matches, including a 2-1 friendly defeat by Algeria in Qatar last month.

Earlier in the day, Iranian media reported that Team Melli’s star striker Ali Daei rejected the post, leaving the fate of the national squad in limbo as there are oppositions to all of the reported candidates for the job. The former Bayern Munich forward was the world's top international goalscorer with 109 goals, until his record was broken by Cristiano Ronaldo in 2021. 

Current Oman boss Branko Ivankovic, who led Iran to the World Cup finals in Germany in 2006, and ex-Osasuna midfielder Javad Nekounam, as well as former Iran’s Portuguese coach Carlos Queiroz, who served as the manager of his native Portugal's national team, and many others, are among the other possible names for the job. Queiroz secured Iran’s berth for the FIFA World Cup 2014 and 2018. 

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People Are Ignored In Government’s Decisions in Iran – Lawmaker

Jul 11, 2022, 18:34 GMT+1

An Iranian lawmaker says the Islamic Republic’s model of governance has created conditions where the people are ignored. 

Ahmad Alirezabeighi, the representative of Tabriz in the parliament, said in an interview on Monday that “it is natural that dissatisfaction increases among people because our policies and strategies are carried out by ignoring the people."

Criticizing the government’s decision to scrap the subsidy for essential food and medicines, despite warnings of more inflation and hardship, he said, “Currently, where are our people in the economic equation?” People should be central in the decisions of the country, he noted. 

Alirezabeighi, a conservative retired police officer who served as the governor of East Azarbaijan province under former president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, added that the problem in Iran is not nuclear negotiations adding that past experience shows that “our problem is ignoring people.”

He said that in negotiations if a government does not enjoy the support of its people, it will have to give in to the pressure of foreigners. 

“Many think that the solution to our economic problems depends on the [revival of] the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA). The past eight years of Rouhani's government showed that the JCPOA cannot be effective in this regard,” he added. 

Alirezabeighi also said that Iran’s interactions with Russia and China should be based on the country’s interests, referring to criticisms over the Islamic Republic’s a 25-year cooperation agreement with China and a proposed 20-year deal with Russia. 


Cholera Outbreak Besetting Iran, Iraq And Afghanistan

Jul 11, 2022, 16:13 GMT+1

While cholera is spreading in western Iran there are reports of deadly outbreaks of the disease in Afghanistan and Iraq, raising concerns of a regional pandemic.

According to the Kurdistan University of Medical Sciences on Monday, the number of cholera patients in the province has reached 39, most of which are reported in the city of Marivan located at the border with Iraq. 

The university’s public relations manager, Bahram Kandai, said the outbreak has not caused any fatalities in the province yet. 

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Prominent Iranian Director Arrested While Protesting Detention Of Other Filmmakers

Jul 11, 2022, 12:54 GMT+1

Award-winning Iranian film director Jafar Panahi was arrested Monday as he was protesting the detention of two other moviemakers at Tehran’s Evin prison.

Unconfirmed social media reports said that Panahi, along with several other Iranian filmmakers, was at the prosecutor’s office of the prison and was detained there. There are other reports that said they were holding a protest in front of the prison for the release of Mohammad Rasoulof and Mostafa Alehahmad when security forces arrested him. 

More than 300 figures of the country’s film industry have signed a statement calling for their release. The Berlinale, the European Film Academy and the International Coalition for Filmmakers at Risk have also spoken out against their arrest.

Panahi, who has won numerous awards, including the Golden Leopard at Locarno Festival, the Golden Lion in Venice, and the Silver Bear at the Berlinale, was once arrested in March 2010 and later charged with propaganda against the regime. 

Rasoulof – another prominent filmmaker with several international awards such as the Golden Bear – and Alehahmad – who is known in international film galas for his short works -- were arrested July 8 as part of the Iranian crackdown on the signatories of a collective statement titled “Lay down the gun” issued by more than 100 film industry personalities in the end of May. 

The statement called on military and security forces who “have become tools for cracking down on the people,” not to suppress protesters during a wave of protests across Iran that were triggered when a 10-story building collapsed in Abadan, leaving at least 37 people dead and dozens missing.

People Prevent Police From Arresting Woman Protesting Hijab In Iran

Jul 11, 2022, 11:20 GMT+1

Amid Iran’s a hash crackdown on ‘bad-hijab women’ and a growing resistance, a woman in northern Iran removed her headscarf in public but people did not allow police to arrest her. 

The middle-aged woman waved her headscarf as she was walking in a main square of the city of Tonekabon – formerly known as Shahsavar -- in Mazandaran province, shouting “freedom” and police forces sought to detain her by force as she was screaming “do not touch me!” 

In a rare scene in Iran where people are normally afraid of law enforcement forces, citizens of the city gathered around the police car, immobilized it, and released the woman. 

Authorities this year named the 12th of July as Hijab and Chastity Day and are planning state-sponsored rallies at stadiums and other places to promote the Islamic notion of the hijab (cover) for women. On the same day, women activists have their own plans to protest by taking off their hijab. 

The Islamic Republic has launched an extensive campaign this year against women they call ‘bad-hijab’. In addition to arrests by the ‘morality police’ on the streets, some officials have ordered extra measures, including to government offices, banks, and public transportation to withhold service to ‘bad-hijab’ women. 

The so-called morality police have also started patrolling medical and academic centers in some cities to enforce compliance with the Islamic dress code.

President Ebrahim Raisi on July 6 called lack of compliance with hijab rules “an organized promotion of [moral] corruption in Islamic society.”