Freedom IRAN همه عالم تن است و ایران دل
Freedom IRAN همه عالم تن است و ایران دل
Mahsa Amini (Persian: مهسا ژینا امینی; September – September), also known as Jîna Emînî (Kurdish: ژینا ئەمینی), was a Kurdish woman whose arrest in Tehran for opposing mandatory hijab and subsequent death in police custody sparked a wave of protests throughout Iran. People and governments around the world reacted widely to her death. Her death sparked widespread protests in Iranian society, resulting in major protests in various cities in Iran and acts of solidarity around the world. Amini's death ignited the global Woman, Life, Freedom movement - "Woman, Life, Freedom", which demanded the end of compulsory hijab laws and other forms of discrimination and oppression against women in Iran. She and the movement were selected as candidates for the Sakharov Prize by the European Parliament for defending freedom and human rights.
On 20 September 2022, 16-year-old Iranian girl Nika Shakarami نیکا شاکرمی) disappeared in Tehran during the 2022 Iranian protests following the death of Mahsa Amini. Her family was informed of her death ten days later. She had died under suspicious circumstances suspected to involve violence by security forces. After her body was identified by her family, t
hey planned to bury her in
Khorramabad
, but the body was allegedly stolen by Iranian authorities and instead buried in
Hayat ol Gheyb
, reportedly to exercise leverage over her family and to avoid a funeral procession which could cause further protests.
Kian Pirfalak was a nine-year-old Iranian boy who was killed in Izeh during the crackdown on the Mahsa Amini protests. He was shot by government security forces while sitting in his parents' vehicle during the attack on Izeh market.
Date: November 16, 2022
Location: Izeh
Cause of death: Shooting by security forces of the Islamic Republic of Iran
Died: 16 November 2022 (aged 9); Izeh, Khuzestan, Iran
Hamidreza Rouhi was a 19, avid biker, a university student, and a model. He was shot and killed by security forces on November 17 in Shahr-e ziba, a neighborhood in the western part of Tehran.
His last instagram post reads: “If the internet gets shut down forever, I want this to be my last post: Long live women, Long live freedom, Long live Iran.”
State media initially claimed that Hamidreza was a member of the Basij militia of the Revolutionary Guards, blamed protesters for his killing, and called him a “martyr” as in the case of several other protesters.
They had to admit later that he was a protester after his friends exposed the lie by posting photos of him on social media showing him protesting and chanting.
“They killed Hamidreza and claimed him as a Basiji”, mourners chanted at his memorial service at Behesht-e Zahra three days after his death.
“Despite the heavy presence of repression agents at Behesht Zahra [cemetery] from the early hours of the morning, a large number of participants managed to gather for this ceremony,” a participant told IranWire.
The security forces “started attacking people" when the crowd chanted slogans against the clerical regime such as “death to [Supreme leader Ali] Khamenei.”
His name will never be forgotten. Along with thousands more who have died in the last 44 years, Hamidreza will forever be in our hearts.
a young Iranian-Kurdish man was executed by the Islamic Republic of Iran for his involvement in the Mahsa Amini protests. He was convicted of Fisad-e-filarz (a Farsi locution translating to "corruption on Earth") for allegedly being involved in the killing of a Basij militiaman during protests in Karaj commemorating the 40-day anniversary of Hadis Najafi's death. Karami was executed alongside volunteer children's coach Seyyed Mohammad Hosseini, another man who was also convicted of Fisad-e-filarz for his alleged involvement in the same killing. Both Karami and Hosseini asserted their innocence, and human rights organizations have accused Iranian authorities of using "shoddy evidence" to convict them.
Seyyed Mohammad Hosseini (Persian: سید محمد حسینی; 21 February 1983 – 7 January 2023) was a 39-year-old Iranian man who Iran's Islamic Republic executed for his participation in the Mahsa Amini protests. He was also known as Kian Hosseini. He was found guilty of Fisad-e-filarz (an Arabic term translating to "corruption on Earth") for his alleged involvement in the murder of a Basij militiaman during demonstrations in Karaj during the 40th-day memorial of Hadis Najafi. Hosseini was hanged with Mohammad Mehdi Karami, a 21-year-old sportsman who was also convicted of Fisad-e-filarz for his alleged role in the same killing. Hosseini maintained his innocence throughout his arrest and trial
Hadis Najafi (Persian: حدیث نجفی, January 5, 2000 – September 21, 2022) was an Iranian woman who died after being struck by gunfire in Mehrshahr, Karaj, during the 2022 Iranian protests following the death of Mahsa Amini. Her death has been widely reported in international media, and like Amini before her, Najafi also became a symbol of female empowerment and the ongoing protests against the Iranian government.
Khodanur Lojei or Lajai (Persian: خدانور لجهای; October 2, 1995 – October 2, 2022) was an Iranian protester from Zahedan, who was killed during the 2022 Zahedan massacre, one of the Mahsa Amini protests. A picture of him with his hands tied to a flagpole with a bottle of water put in front of him (but out of his reach) has become one of the symbols of the ongoing protests in Iran.
In the city of Anzali, Iran, Mehran Samak, aged 27, was reportedly shot in the head. Allegedly, he honked his car horn to celebrate the US victory over Iran in a World Cup match. Samak was among many Iranians expressing frustration towards the Islamic Regime following Iran's defeat.
In the midst of ongoing anti-hijab demonstrations in Iran, celebrity chef Mehrshad Shahidi, often likened to Iran's Jamie Oliver, purportedly met a tragic end at the hands of the country's Revolutionary Guard forces just a day shy of his 20th birthday. His untimely and brutal demise prompted an outpouring of sorrow throughout Iran, with thousands reportedly attending his funeral on Saturday. The Telegraph reported that the 19-year-old was apprehended during a protest and fatally beaten by baton-wielding members of the Revolutionary Guard in Arak city. His family disclosed that he succumbed to skull injuries sustained during the assault, although they were coerced into stating that his death resulted from a heart attack.
Armita Geravand, a 17-year-old Iranian girl, slipped into a coma while riding the Tehran Metro on October 1, 2023. Following this, she was placed in the intensive care unit of an Army hospital. Sadly, she was pronounced brain dead on October 22 and declared deceased on October 28. This tragic event has drawn parallels to the passing of Mahsa Amini and has been described as "unbearable" by the German foreign minister.
Hananeh Kia, a 23-year-old woman, was fatally shot by security agents in Nowshahr while returning home from a dentist appointment. while she was in the emergency room sheet back the nurses and doctors to not let her die because it was her wedding in two weeks .on that night at least 36 individuals, many of whom were teenagers and young adults in their twenties, were reported killed since the onset of widespread protests following the death of Mahsa Amini last Friday. Nowshahr, situated in Mazandaran province, is among the approximately 80 Iranian cities witnessing significant protests against the dictatorship in Iran.
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