Police claim Mahsa’s death was unfortunate
In the hours following her detention by morality police for allegedly violating the hijab rules, Mahsa Amini, 22, went into a coma. Her beating by officers was allegedly witnessed by witnesses, however, Police Brig-Gen Hossein Rahimi refuted these "cowardly charges."
Her passing spurred demonstrations in the nation's capital and western Iran, where two people are said to have died during Monday's skirmishes with riot police. Social media videos appeared to show residents of the town of Divandarreh throwing stones before fleeing when they came under fire.
The Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, was the subject of protests in the capital during which women tore off their headscarves and chanted, "Death to the tyrant" (a phrase frequently used in reference to him).
After three days in a coma, Ms. Amini, an ethnic Kurd from the western city of Saqez in the Kurdistan province, passed away at a hospital on Friday.
She was taken into custody by morality police on Tuesday in Tehran outside of a metro station. They charged her with disobeying the legislation mandating that women cover their arms and legs with loose clothing and their hair with a hijab.
Witnesses claim she was assaulted inside the police van transporting her to the detention facility. She allegedly experienced "sudden heart failure" while waiting with other women at the institution to be "educated," according to the police, who dismissed the accusation.
In the CCTV footage they published, a woman they described as Ms. Amini was conversing with a female official when she was being grabbed by her clothing. She then collapses to the ground while holding her head with her hands.
According to the interior ministry, Ms. Amini "probably had preexisting physical concerns," on Saturday.
Her father, however, stated on Sunday that she was "healthy and had no health problems" to pro-reform news organizations. Additionally, he claimed that his daughter had bruises on her legs and that the CCTV tape depicted an "edited version" of the incident.
While expressing sympathy to Ms. Amini's family on Monday, Brig-Gen Rahimi stressed that Ms. Amini had not been hurt physically.
He told reporters, "The evidence reveals that there was no negligence or improper behavior on the side of the police."
The incident led to significant condemnation
of the morality police's recent campaign on "improper clothes," which
was instigated by the death.
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