human rights watch

onsdag 28 mars 2018

one of them the women who protested against forced veil in Iran got prison punishment by the Iranian regime




Iranian women who protested against the forced veil.
Have been under serious threat in Iran.
one of them the women who protested against forced veil in Iran got prison punishment by the Iranian regime.
Imprisonment for one of the critically accused women in the veil in Iran, after threats by Iranian regime officials against women and critics of forced veil, this time, Maryam Shariatmadari, a student activist and protesters to the forced veil and the so-called "Girls of the Revolutionary Street" The year of imprisonment was sentenced.
Maryam Shariatmadari, student activist and protesters to the forced veil and the so-called "Girls of Revolution Street", was sentenced to one year imprisonment.


The Human Rights Campaign, Nasrin Sotoudeh, a human rights lawyer, the campaign has said that his client Mary Shariatmadari Branch 1091 Penal Court of Tehran Province on charges of "promoting corruption by unveiling" a one-year prison sentence. The verdict was sent to Ms. Sotoudeh on the fifth day of March, 1397.

Sotoudeh compared this sentence to Saeed Tusi's acquittal.

"The human rights campaign of Iran," quoting Nasrin Sotoudeh, wrote: "In societies that are tightening and tightening the conditions for women by moral justification, they are seen as similar to those we saw in Sa'id Tusi's case. I've had similar cases to Mr. Tusi in recent years. "

Maryam Shariatmadari, a defense attorney, referred to the case of a girl abusing her father, saying, "The courts passed the complaint with strange disregard."

Nasrin Sotoudeh, criticizing the dual judicial approach to the judiciary, said: "I think that protesting the hijab with such abnormal laws and beyond the legal and judicial framework can not be ruled out."

According to Ms. Sotoudeh, the protest against the forced hijab is still pending and "the only way is to pay attention to it".

In recent days, Major Tehran Police Chief Hossein Rahimi has threatened to face protest women with a "decisive clash of police".

During the past month, Tehran's Attorney General Abbas Jafari Dolatabadi, attacking critics of forced veil, accused these people of "encouraging people to go to corruption through the discovery of hijab in the public eye and pretending to act haram and appearing in public places without hijab Shi'i "Kurdistan Ali Khamenei also claimed that women's protest against forced veil is the" think tank "of enemies.

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