Bangkok Post

Concern over Iranian girls in viral ‘Calm Down’ video

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Concern grew on Tuesday over the well-being of five young Iranian women who filmed themselves dancing without headscarve­s in a viral video, after allegation­s they had been arrested and forced into confessing.

The footage showed the women dancing with bare midriffs beneath highrises in the Tehran residentia­l district of Ekbatan to the song Calm Down by Nigerian Afrobeats singer and rapper Rema.

It spread widely on TikTok and other social media channels last week around Internatio­nal Women’s Day on March 8.

Activists, apparently from the Ekbatan area, first posted the video on Telegram and Twitter. They said authoritie­s had been asking residents in the area if they knew the women, based on the footage.

On Tuesday the activists alleged the women had been detained and forced into making a video in which they expressed regret.

In the Islamic republic it is illegal for women to dance in public as well as to not wear the Islamic headscarf.

Abolition of the obligatory headscarf rule has been one of the chief demands of the protest movement that erupted in September after the death of Mahsa Amini, 22, who had been arrested for allegedly violating the dress code.

After the initial viral footage of the five, another video emerged on social media of four women, their heads fully covered, stepping forward one by one to express regret.

It appeared to have been filmed in a similar Ekbatan area, but neither the video nor the circumstan­ces in which it was made could be verified.

Whether the women had been released was also not immediatel­y clear.

Ekbatan, a middle-income area popular with young profession­als and families, saw repeated anti-regime actions in the past few months.

Rema retweeted video of the women dancing with their long hair uncovered and commented: “To all the beautiful women who are fighting for a better world, I’m inspired by you, I sing for you and I dream with you.”

The video also caught the attention of German Member of the European Parliament Hannah Neumann.

On Twitter, she wrote: “On Women’s day, they published this video.

“Wouldn’t be worth news, but they danced in Iran,” Ms Neumann said in a tweet.

“The regime investigat­ed, put them in prison, forced them into confession­s and to wear hijab,” she alleged.

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