"#Sama Jahanbaz", a 22-year-old girl from Isfahan, disappeared in Shiraz on July 15, 1401. She had gone to the Moali Abad neighborhood to sell gold. After a brief conversation with her mother, her phone went off and she was never heard from again.
"Satareh Heydari" went shopping in the city center on November 15, but both of her phone lines were switched off and she has not been heard from since.
"Marzieh Al-Boghbish", 40, disappeared suspiciously on September 18 of this year near Shapour Park in Abadan.
In Iran, the disappearance of women is not just an "incident";
it is a mirror.
A mirror that simultaneously shows the weakness of the law, the pressure of tradition, gender discrimination, economic crisis and public distrust.
When girls from a society disappear without a trace
, this means that something deeper than an individual crime is going on
; it means that women's security is more fragile than it should be.
It has been proven in the world that
where the law does not protect women,
where violence remains hidden,
where the government is not transparent,
where families fear "reputation",
women are the first victims
even if there is no hidden hand behind the incident.
The reality is that today in Iran, each disappearance
frightens not only a family, but a society.
A fear that is greater than the incident itself.
A fear that is rooted in the feeling of helplessness.
And this is where the main sentence can be said
"Women's safety is the red line of a society's health.
If women are not safe, no one is safe.
If women's disappearances continue
for whatever reason, society is collapsing.
And if a government fails to protect women,
it unintentionally produces the same fear
that people fear.
The problem with women in Iran today is definitely the silence, the weakness of the law, and the lack of protection. And until this cycle is corrected, no one can say with certainty, "This is just an accident."
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