International UPDATE: Iranian Woman Strips to Bra and Pants in Protest, Released Without Charge After Family Refuse to Declare Her Mentally Ill

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Human rights activists have called on authorities in Iran to release a woman who was detained after removing her clothes at a university, in what they said was a protest against the compulsory hijab laws.
A video surfaced on social media on Saturday showing the woman in her underwear sitting on some steps and then walking calmly along a pavement at the Science and Research Branch of Islamic Azad University in Tehran.
In a second video, the woman appears to remove her underwear. Shortly afterwards, plainclothes agents are seen forcibly detaining her and pushing her into a car.
Azad University said the woman suffered from a “mental disorder” and had been taken to a “psychiatric hospital”.
Many Iranians on social media questioned the claim and portrayed her actions as part of the “Woman, Life, Freedom” movement that has seen many women publicly defy the laws requiring them to cover their hair and wear long, loose-fitting clothing.
More than 500 people were reportedly killed during nationwide protests that erupted two years ago after a Kurdish woman, Mahsa Amini, died in police custody after being detained for not wearing hijab “properly”.
The Amirkabir Newsletter Telegram channel - which describes itself as “Iranian student movement media” and was the first to publish the story - reported that the woman had an altercation with security agents over not wearing a headscarf, external, leading to her undressing during the scuffle.
It said the woman’s head hit the door or frame of the plainclothes agents’ car while she was being detained, causing it to bleed, and that she was taken to an undisclosed location.
Witness told BBC Persian that the woman entered their class at Azad University and began filming students. When the lecturer objected, she left, yelling, they said.
According to witnesses, the woman told the students: “I’ve come to save you.”
Iranian media meanwhile released a video of a man with his face blurred who claimed to be the woman’s ex-husband and asked the public not to share the video for the sake of her two children. BBC Persian has not been able to verify the man's claims.
“When I protested against mandatory hijab, after security forces arrested me, my family was pressured to declare me mentally ill,” said Canada-based women’s rights activist Azam Jangravi, external, who fled Iran after being sentenced to three years in prison for removing her headscarf during a protest in 2018.
“My family didn’t do it, but many families under pressure do, thinking it’s the best way to protect their loved ones. This is how the Islamic Republic tries to discredit women, by questioning their mental health,” she added.
Amnesty International said Iran “must immediately and unconditionally release the university student who was violently arrested”.
“Pending her release, authorities must protect her from torture and other ill-treatment, and ensure access to family and lawyer. Allegations of beatings and sexual violence against her during arrest need independent and impartial investigations. Those responsible must held to account,” it added.
The UN Special Rapporteur on Iran, Mai Sato, posted the footage on X and wrote that she would be “monitoring this incident closely, including the authorities' response”, external.
Narges Mohammadi, an Iranian Nobel Peace Prize laureate who is currently imprisoned in Iran, issued a statement saying she was gravely concerned about the case, external.
“Women pay the price for defiance, but we do not bow down to force,” she said.
“The student who protested at the university turned her body - long weaponized as a tool of repression - into a symbol of dissent. I call for her freedom and an end to the harassment of women.”


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Iran: get over your frigid bullshit, people shouldn't be dying (see: protests) or being committed for your hurt feelings and shocked sensibilities.

Grow up. Behave like adults. Let people be themselves.

Every day Muslim nations trying to "1 up" eachother to be worst for women to live in.
 
It's a still shot i understand and not video, but it's pretty funny how you've got something that would be abnormal even in western culture happening in Iranian society and everyone around her is basically pretending nothing weird is going on. Like, dude with his back to her. Women in hijabs right near her pretending she's not there. 2 dudes sitting on a bench ignoring her. The scene looks surreal because of the perceived utter indifference of everyone around her.
I don’t think it’s indifference, I think they just don’t want to be implicated in it in or seen as contributing to it in anyway possible.

I imagine that some dude stopping to stare at her would also be in trouble with the religious extremist.
 
It's a still shot i understand and not video, but it's pretty funny how you've got something that would be abnormal even in western culture happening in Iranian society and everyone around her is basically pretending nothing weird is going on. Like, dude with his back to her. Women in hijabs right near her pretending she's not there. 2 dudes sitting on a bench ignoring her. The scene looks surreal because of the perceived utter indifference of everyone around her.

Religious people are pretty conditioned to ignore reality. I'd assume the threat of penalty of law would also have something to do with that.
 
I don’t think it’s indifference, I think they just don’t want to be implicated in it in or seen as contributing to it in anyway possible.

I imagine that some dude stopping to stare at her would also be in trouble with the religious extremist.

Could be yeah. It's just how it looks. They don't seem to be trying to physically distance themselves from her, they're just pretending she's not there.
 
They are going to treat her like Sofia in The Penguin when she was put away.
 
she will be put to death eventually and made an example out of, like any other woman that has defied their gov. I am just glad we give them money
 
She has some serious balls.

Through, is there any proof that she is alive?

I feel like this could become one of those iconic things such as the Tiananmen Square
 
I fully support this brave woman and implore women everywhere to undress themselves every chance they get. Let's show these men what we got, gals!!!!
 
also are you saying misogyny is worse than islamophobia?
It's not an either or situation, nor is it a contest to see which is the worst. Both can suck.

Moreover, I don't think it's Islamophobia as much as it is hatred of Fundamentalism. Be it Christian, Muslim or Jewish fundamentalists are fucked in the head.
 
Are the people around her worried about getting stoned or some shit by looking at her?

And yeah that is pretty batshit insane to do that as a female in Iran.
 
yes? is that controversial?
I think its pretty context dependent. The Iranian state beating women to death over improper hijab is depraved and certainly worse than any Islamophobia a Muslim in the West experiences but also there are and have been genocides against Muslims like the historic Circassian genocide and the current Rohingya genocide and I would say those are worse than Iranian hijab laws.
 
These cave men make me laugh.

Fuck Iran forever.
 
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