NoThere is no news from Iran on the status of Armita Garavand, the young Iranian she would have been beaten in Theran subway by moral police because she wasn’t wearing jihab and now in a coma. And now, nothing is known about her mother, Shahin Ahmadi, who is always standing outside the hospital where her daughter is hospitalized. According to NGO Hengaw the country’s security forces would have taken the woman to prisonafter an argument over the headscarf with the police.
Iran, Armita Garavand’s mother taken away by the morality police
An arrest which, sadly, is not that surprising. According to what is said, in fact, since his daughter Armita was allegedly attacked by Iranian agents, the girl’s family and friends only suffer threats by the forces of the Islamic Republic.
Everyone’s cell phones were confiscated, their parents were immediately interrogated and the state media then spread the news of their denial regarding the attack.
The attack on the girl because she was not wearing a veil
The attack on the girl was reconstructed by the security cameras of the Shohada metro in Tehran. You can see it in the image Garavand being shot by Iranian agents in the Shohada metro station in Tehran. Then unconscious, she was dragged out of the carriage by a group of girls, who left her on the platform. She has been in Fajr hospital ever since.
Government pressure to maintain silence
IranWire, a group of journalists working in exile, meanwhile reports that the Tehran regime is pressuring and threatening the high school’s teachers and classmateswarning them against spreading any news or photos of the young woman on social media.
The arrest of Armita Garavand’s mother
According to a report received by the Hengaw Human Rights Organization on the evening of Wednesday 4 October 2023, Shahin Ahmadi was reportedly transferred to an unknown location after a very violent arrest.
No information was given on how the woman is now. Meanwhile, the first international reactions are being felt: Germany and the United States have expressed concern over the Iranian victim of a brutal beating by the regime’s religious police, because it risks becoming a new Mahsa Amini.
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