International Omada News #Iran
In every way, Iran tries to force women to wear Hijab. The United Nations complains that the regime with drones and cameras seeks to impose women the strict costume Islamic Code.
Researchers say Iranian officials are encouraging residents to use specialized telephone applications to denounce women for alleged violations of the clothing code in private vehicles, such as taxi and ambulances.
The United Nations new survey also highlights the increasing use of unmanned aircraft and security cameras to monitor Hijab in Tehran and southern Iran.
For women who defy the laws or protest against them, the consequences are serious - such as conception, torture and beatings, and even rape.
The findings of the Independent International Research for the Islamic Republic of Iran come in come after last year found that the Iranian state was responsible for "physical violence", which brought Mahsa Amini to death in 2022.
Witnesses said the 22 -year -old girl was badly beaten by the moral police during her arrest, but authorities denied abused and attributed her death to "sudden heart failure". Her assassination has caused a mass wave of protests that continues to this day, despite threats to arrest and imprisonment.
"Two and a half years after the launch of demonstrations in September 2022, women and girls in Iran continue to discriminate in particular with regard to the imposition of Hijab that is mandatory," the report said.
"The state is increasingly relying on state -funded self -judge in an obvious attempt to recruit businesses and individuals in compliance with Hijab, presenting it as political responsibility."
At Tehran University in Amirkabir, authorities installed facial recognition software on its entrance gate to also identify women who do not wear hijab, the report said.
Monitoring cameras on large streets of Iran are also used to search for women who do not wear the Muslim scarf.
Researchers also said they had acquired the application of "Nazer" mobile Iranian police, which allows "tested" members of the public and police to report unsecured women in vehicles, including ambulances, buses, subway wagons and taxi.
"Users can add the site, date, time and number of the vehicle's sign that the supposed infringement of compulsory Hitzab use occurred, which then" marks "the vehicle on the internet, notifying the police," the report said.
According to the report, a text message was then sent to the recorded owner of the vehicle, warning that he was found to violate the mandatory Hijab laws. Vehicles can be seized to ignore warnings.
UN researchers interviewed 300 victims and witnesses - also examined in depth the Iranian judicial system, which, as they said, lack independence. Victims of torture and other violations were also persecuted, and their families were "systematically intimidated", according to their report.
They also found evidence of the out -of -court executions of three children and three adult demonstrators, who were later rejected by the state as suicides.
The report also found additional cases of sexual violence during detention, citing the case of a woman who was beaten wildly, underwent two virtual executions, raped and then raped as a group.
The report will be presented to the Human Rights Council on 18 March.
Source: First Issue
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