Iran schoolgirl dies after 'beaten' by security forces

Family rejects official Iran findings on Amini death, says lawyer

By: AFP
Published: 03:36 PM, 20 Oct, 2022
Iran schoolgirl dies after 'beaten' by security forces
Caption: Courtesy The Sun Daily.
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A 15-year-old Iranian girl died last week after being beaten during a raid by the security forces on her school, a teachers' union said, urging the authorities to stop killing "innocent" protesters.

Asra Panahi died on October 13, after "plainclothes officers attacked" Shahed High School in the northwestern city of Ardabil, the Co-ordinating Council of Teachers Syndicates said.

The pupils had been taken into town for an "ideological event" at a spot known to be a centre for protests sparked by Mahsa Amini's death in the custody of Iran's notorious morality police.

Some pupils, who started "chanting slogans against discrimination and inequality", were "subjected to violence and insults by plainclothes and veiled women", the union said.

After being returned to school, they were beaten again, it said in a statement issued on Monday.

"After that one of the pupils named Asra Panahi unfortunately passed away in hospital and a number of students were arrested," it said, adding the beating left another pupil in a coma.

State television later aired an interview with her uncle in which he said she died of heart failure.

Ardabil's parliamentary representative, Kazem Mousavi, was quoted as saying she had "committed suicide by swallowing pills" in a report by the Didban Iran website.

Those accounts raised the ire of retired Iranian football star Ali Daei, who hails from Ardabil and has run into trouble with the authorities over his support for the Amini protests.

In a post to his 10 million Instagram followers, Daei said he did not believe Panahi had died of heart failure and dismissed as "rumours" the MP's claim that she had taken her own life.

The death of the 22-year-old Amini, after her arrest for allegedly breaching Iran's strict dress code for women, has fuelled the biggest protests seen in the country for years.

In its statement issued on Tuesday, the teachers' union slammed the school's decision to get pupils involved in the "ideological event" without the consent of their parents.

"The council calls on the system and military and security forces to stop their transgressions against schools," it said.

"This council also calls on the system to stop the killing of innocent people and defenceless protesters."

In response to Daei's Instagram post, the judiciary's Mizan Online website rejected his version of events as "fake news".

"If Mr Daei has any proof regarding the claims made about the death of the girl pupil in Ardabil, he is expected to present them to the related officials as soon as possible and to follow up on them," it said.

A coalition of human rights groups, including Amnesty International, said on Monday that the security forces' crackdown on the Amini protests has killed at least 23 identified children.

Family rejects official Iran findings on Amini death

Lawyers for Mahsa Amini's family have rejected an official Iranian medical report that found her death was not caused by beatings, they said in comments published on Thursday.

Amini, 22, died on September 16, three days after falling into a coma following her arrest in Tehran by the morality police for allegedly breaching the Islamic republic's strict dress code for women.

Three days after her death, Amini's father Amjad, told Iran's Fars news agency that she had been in "perfect health".

In its report published on October 7, Iran's Forensic Organization said her death "was not caused by blows to the head and vital organs and limbs of the body".

"The lawyers rejected the forensic doctor's report in their statement of defence," one of the lawyers acting for the parents, Saleh Nikbakht, told Etemad newspaper.

The parents called for "the re-examination of the cause of death by another commission in the presence of doctors" who are confidants to the Amini family.

"Without clarifying the investigation process and the role of the person or persons involved in the arrest and transfer of Mahsa to the morality police headquarters, it is not possible to defend the rights of the parents, and... to resolve the ambiguities about the cause of death," Nikbakht added.

Last month, Amini's family filed a complaint against the police who arrested her and called on the authorities to release all photos and videos taken during her detention.

According to Nikbakht, the chief prosecutor had promised "that a medical team appointed by the family would be informed of the course of the investigation".

The family called on the judiciary to "invite five neurosurgeons and neurologists, a cardiologist and a psychiatrist to choose from a list of 10 doctors nominated by Mahsa Amini's parents," according to Nikbakht.

Categories : World

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