Otago Daily Times

Technology being used to target dissenters, activists say

Activists fear more arrests, abuses after the death of Mahsa Amini. Sanan Mahoozi reports.

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PROTESTS have broken out across Iran over the death of a woman held by morality police for ‘‘unsuitable attire’’, with activists warning of worse to come as the state deploys facial recognitio­n technology to control its citizens.

Mahsa Amini, a 22yearold from Iran’s Kurdistan province, fell into a coma and died following her arrest in Teheran 10 days ago over the country’s strict new hijab policy, sparking demonstrat­ions in numerous areas, the capital included.

Amini has since become a rallying point for Iranians who oppose what they see as rising state surveillan­ce and fear eroding human rights, with women at the centre of the clampdown.

Her death has sparked a daily panic for many ordinary Iranians who fear they, too, could fall foul of the morality police, with women routinely arrested for breaking hijab rules, and plans now under way to extend surveillan­ce with technology.

‘‘Women in Iran live under pressure on a daily basis because of the mandatory hijab law,’’ Shiva Nazar Ahari, a women’s rights activist based in Slovenia, said.

‘‘They are the first targets to be scrutinise­d by this facial recognitio­n technology — hundreds of women get caught under the hijab law every day. It can be very dangerous.’’

Police deny Amini was mistreated, and said she had health issues. Her family disagree, saying she was in good shape.

But for 29yearold Tina — a Teheran resident who would only use her first name for fear of official reprisal — a simple trip from home to work now feels like a hazard.

Before leaving home each morning, Tina checks a mirror and adjusts her hair to make sure every single strand is firmly tucked under her head scarf.

This daily ritual has become all the more fraught after authoritie­s said early this month they would use facial recognitio­n technology in public places to spot women who didn’t adhere to the new hijab law, which was signed in midAugust and requires them to cover their hair in public.

‘‘I am terrified every time I leave the house,’’ the IT specialist, who works for a private company in the capital, said.

‘‘These cameras are everywhere and when they catch you, you receive a text message from the police saying that you have been fined or worse,’’ she said by voice message from Teheran.

The government’s plan to use surveillan­ce technology to identify women breaking the strict Islamic dress code will lead to more rights violations, human rights activists say.

Authoritie­s have not revealed a start date, but surveillan­ce experts say the apparatus is already in place and ready to go.

With protests spreading fast across the nation, authoritie­s have accused foreign agents and unspecifie­d terrorists of instigatin­g the violence.

No end to abuse

Teheran has met with criticism by activists before over citizen privacy, official surveillan­ce and individual rights.

In 2015, the Iranian government introduced a biometric national identity card that stores personal data including iris scans, fingerprin­ts and facial images.

Human rights activists have said the ID card — which is required for everything from opening a bank account to accessing the domestic internet — could be used for mass surveillan­ce of citizens, and to deny services to dissidents and others.

The government has been using facial recognitio­n technology to identify and arrest protesters and dissidents, activists say.

While authoritie­s justify surveillan­ce on security grounds, human rights groups have raised concerns about privacy violations and the potential for profiling and discrimina­tion, particular­ly as there is no data protection law.

‘‘The system is already in place, the system is operating in all the public places,’’ Amir Rashidi, director of digital rights at Texasbased Miaan Group, which supports human rights in Iran, said.

‘‘The government used the cameras that were meant to catch thieves and criminals, to catch those who weren’t wearing a mask during the pandemic — and now women who have improper hijab,’’ he said, adding that the image is matched with the national ID database, and notice of the violation sent to the woman’s home.

‘‘There is no data protection law, so there is no end to abusing this data.’’

Iran’s Ministry for Promoting Virtue and Preventing Vice could not be reached for comment.

Forced to confess

Iranian women have been required to wear the hijab in public since the 1979 Islamic Revolution, and President Ebrahim Raisi signed an order

last month to enforce the country’s dress code with a new list of restrictio­ns.

Authoritie­s have said that women seen without hijab in their social media posts risk being fined and fired from their jobs, and have asked drivers of ridehailin­g apps to report woman riders who are not wearing proper hijab.

Since then, citizens have reported women for flouting the law, and several women arrested under the new rules have been forced to apologise on state television.

The use of facial recognitio­n technology is intrusive, and makes it easier to identify and target people participat­ing in protests and other acts of dissent, Sussan Tahmasebi, founder of Femena, a women’s rights organisati­on, said.

‘‘It warns of a future where there will be a lot less respect for human rights in Iran, and women’s rights will be compromise­d much more easily,’’ she said in a video call from Washington D.C.

Unbowed, female protesters are taking to the streets in large numbers in Iran, with several women setting their hijabs on fire in public, social media posts showed.

The posts could not be independen­tly verified amid a nationwide internet outage in Iran.

But Soosan, a 30yearold beauty therapist who lives in the northern city of Qazvin, said the new surveillan­ce measures and the death of Amini have put her in a state of utter despair.

‘‘The facial recognitio­n will only be used against us. I keep monitoring my head scarf in the car, and thinking: ‘If one day I get caught because my hair is showing, how will I handle the situation (so I don’t end up dead),’’’ she said, asking to go by one name.

‘‘The feeling I have is one of hopelessne­ss.’’ — Thomson Reuters Foundation

 ?? ?? Dissenting voices . . . People take part in a protest outside the Iranian Consulate in Istanbul, Turkey, over the death in Teheran 10 days ago of Iranian Mahsa Amini, and right, at a sitin in Martyrs’ Square in Beirut, Lebanon. Mahsa Amini fell into a coma and died after being arrested for allegedly violating Iran’s hijab rules. Her death has sparked days of violent protests across Iran, in which at least 41 people have been killed.
Dissenting voices . . . People take part in a protest outside the Iranian Consulate in Istanbul, Turkey, over the death in Teheran 10 days ago of Iranian Mahsa Amini, and right, at a sitin in Martyrs’ Square in Beirut, Lebanon. Mahsa Amini fell into a coma and died after being arrested for allegedly violating Iran’s hijab rules. Her death has sparked days of violent protests across Iran, in which at least 41 people have been killed.
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 ?? PHOTOS: GETTY IMAGES, REUTERS ??
PHOTOS: GETTY IMAGES, REUTERS

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