Macau Daily Times

Crisis over suspected Iran schoolgirl poisonings escalates

- JON GAMBRELL, DUBAI

Acrisis over suspected poisonings targeting Iranian schoolgirl­s escalated Sunday as authoritie­s acknowledg­ed over 50 schools were struck in a wave of possible cases. The poisonings have spread further fear among parents as Tehran has faced months of unrest.

It remains unclear who or what is responsibl­e since the alleged poisonings began in November in the Shiite holy city of Qom. Reports now suggest schools across 21 of Iran’s 30 provinces have seen suspected cases, with girls’ schools the site of nearly all the incidents.

The attacks have raised fears that other girls could be poisoned apparently just for going to school. Education for girls has never been challenged in the over 40 years since the 1979 Islamic Revolution. Iran has been calling on the Taliban in neighborin­g Afghanista­n to have girls and women return to school.

Interior Minister Ahmad Vahidi on Saturday said without elaboratin­g that investigat­ors had recovered “suspicious samples” in the course of their investigat­ions into the incidents, according to the state-run IRNA news agency. He called for calm among the public, while also accusing the “enemy’s media terrorism” of inciting more panic over the alleged poisonings.

However, it wasn’t until the poisonings received internatio­nal media attention that hard-line President Ebrahim Raisi announced an investigat­ion into the incidents on Wednesday.

Vahidi said at least 52 schools had been affected by suspected poisonings. Iranian media reports have put the number of schools at over 60. At least one boy’s school reportedly has been affected.

Videos of upset parents and schoolgirl­s in emergency rooms with IVS in their arms have flooded social media. Making sense of the crisis remains challengin­g, given that nearly 100 journalist­s have been detained by Iran since the start of protests in September over the death of 22-year-old Mahsa Amini. She had been detained by the country’s morality police and later died.

The security force crackdown on those protests has seen at least 530 people killed and 19,700 others detained, according to Human Rights Activists in Iran.

Attacks on women have happened in the past in Iran, most recently with a wave of acid attacks in 2014 around Isfahan, at the time believed to have been carried out by hard-liners targeting women for how they dressed.

Speculatio­n in Iran’s tightly controlled state media has focused on the possibilit­y of exile groups or foreign powers being behind the poisonings. That was also repeatedly alleged during the recent protests without evidence. In recent days, Germany’s foreign minister, a White House official and others have called on Iran to do more to protect schoolgirl­s — a concern Iran’s Foreign Ministry has dismissed as “crocodile tears.”

However, the U.S. Commission on Internatio­nal Religious Freedom noted that Iran has “continued to tolerate attacks against women and girls for months” amid the recent protests.

“These poisonings are occurring in an environmen­t where Iranian officials have impunity for the harassment, assault, rape, torture and execution of women peacefully asserting their freedom of religion or belief,” Sharon Kleinbaum of the commission said in a statement.

Suspicion in Iran has fallen on possible hard-liners for carrying out the suspected poisonings. Iranian journalist­s, including Jamileh Kadivar, a prominent former reformist lawmaker at Tehran’s Ettelaat newspaper, have cited a supposed communique from a group calling itself Fidayeen Velayat that purportedl­y said that girls’ education “is considered forbidden” and threatened to “spread the poisoning of girls throughout Iran” if girls’ schools remain open.

Iranian officials have not acknowledg­ed any group called Fidayeen Velayat, which roughly translates to English as “Devotees of the Guardiansh­ip.” However, Kadivar’s mention of the threat in print comes as she remains influentia­l within Iranian politics and has ties to its theocratic ruling class. The head of the Ettelaat newspaper also is appointed by Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

Kadivar wrote Saturday that another possibilit­y is “mass hysteria.” There have been previous cases of this over the last decades, most recently in Afghanista­n from 2009 through 2012. Then, the World Health Organizati­on wrote about so-called “mass psychogeni­c illnesses” affecting hundreds of girls in schools across the country.

“Reports of stench smells preceding the appearance of symptoms have given credit to the theory of mass poisoning,” the WHO wrote at the time. “However, investigat­ions into the causes of these outbreaks have yielded no such evidence so far.”

Iran has not acknowledg­ed asking the world health body for assistance in its investigat­ion. The WHO did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment Sunday.

However, Kadivar also noted that hard-liners in Iranian government­s in the past carried out so-called “chain murders” of activists and others in the 1990s. She also referenced the killings by Islamic vigilantes in 2002 in the city of Kerman that saw one victim stoned to death and others tied up and thrown into a swimming pool, where they drowned. She described those vigilantes as being members of the Basij, an all-volunteer force in Iran’s paramilita­ry Revolution­ary Guard.

“The common denominato­r of all of them is their extreme thinking, intellectu­al stagnation and rigid religious view that allowed them to have committed such violent actions,” Kadivar wrote.

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