Toronto Star

Mother says teen was beaten to death

Account contradict­s official version that girl accidental­ly fell

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DUBAI, UNITED ARAB EM IRATES The mother of a 16-year-old Iranian girl has disputed official claims that her daughter fell to her death from a high building, saying the teen was killed by blows to the head as part of the crackdown on anti-hijab protests roiling the country.

Nasreen Shakarami also said authoritie­s kept her daughter Nika’s death a secret for nine days and then snatched the body from a morgue to bury her in a remote area, against the family’s wishes. The bereaved mother spoke in a video message Thursday to Radio Farda, the Persian-language arm of the U.S.-funded station Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty.

Nika Shakarami has become the latest icon of the protests, seen as the gravest threat to Iran’s ruling elites in years. Attempts by authoritie­s in recent days to portray the teen’s death as an accident could signal concern that the incident is fuelling further anger against the government.

The protests, which enter their fourth week Saturday, were sparked by the death of 22-year-old Mahsa Amini in the custody of the morality police. They had detained Amini for alleged violations of the country’s strict Islamic dress code.

Young women have often been leading the protests, tearing off and defiantly waving their head scarves as they call for toppling the government.

The protests quickly spread to communitie­s across Iran and have been met by a harsh government crackdown, including beatings, arrests and killings of demonstrat­ors, as well as internet disruption­s.

Human rights groups estimate that dozens of protesters have been killed over the past three weeks. On Thursday, the London-based group Amnesty Internatio­nal published its findings about what appears to be the single deadliest incident so far — in the city of Zahedan on Sept. 30.

The report said Iranian security forces killed at least 66 people, including children, and wounded hundreds, after firing live rounds at protesters, bystanders and worshipper­s in a violent crackdown that day. Iranian authoritie­s claimed the Zahedan violence involved unnamed separatist­s. More than a dozen people have been killed since then in the area, the report said.

Meanwhile, Nika Shakarami’s mother pushed back against attempts by officials to frame her daughter’s death as an accident.

In her video message, she said that the forensics report showed that Nika had died from repeated blows to the head.

Nika’s body was intact, but some of her teeth, bones in her face and part of the back of her skull were broken, she said. “The damage was to her head,” she said. “Her body was intact, arms and legs.”

Earlier this week, Iran’s police chief, Gen. Hossein Ashtari, claimed that the teen had gone to a building “and fell from the upper floor at a time of gatherings.” He said that “the fall from that height led to her death.”

 ?? E MRAH GUREL THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A protester holds up a drawing of Mahsa Amini, who died while in the custody of Iran’s morality police. They had detained Amini for alleged violations of the country’s strict Islamic dress code.
E MRAH GUREL THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A protester holds up a drawing of Mahsa Amini, who died while in the custody of Iran’s morality police. They had detained Amini for alleged violations of the country’s strict Islamic dress code.

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