New fight against surveillance cameras; Iranians use sanitary pads as weapons

New fight once morest surveillance cameras; Iranians ‘Weaponize’ Sanitary Pads

Tehran: Protests are intensifying once morest the actions of the Iranian security forces who fired at those who protested the death of Mahsa Amini.

Iranian women are protesting by covering the security cameras installed by the authorities to monitor them with sanitary pads.

Many videos of CCTV cameras installed in metro stations and trains being covered with sanitary pads are also widely circulated on social media.

Next to some of the covered security cameras, the names of political dissidents in Iran who were imprisoned or killed during the protests can also be seen.

Security forces opened fire on protesters at a metro station in Tehran, the capital of Iran.

Following this, the people of Iran started ‘fighting’ using sanitary pads to prevent the authorities from monitoring them and enforcing the women’s ‘dress code’.

Social media users are celebrating the move as a strong statement once morest the control and surveillance of women who have been at the forefront of the series of protests over Amini’s death.

Mahsa Amini, a native of Saqqez, Iran, was killed while in the custody of the moral police for allegedly not following the hijab dress code. Later, women took to the streets in large numbers to protest Amini’s death, pulling their hijabs off their heads, burning them and cutting their hair.

The moral police arrested 22-year-old Amini on the charge of not following the hijab dress code. He was arrested while traveling with his family to Tehran. Amini was killed three days later on September 16.

Eyewitnesses revealed that Mahsa was beaten by the police in the police van.

After Mahsa Amini’s death, protests broke out across Iran and internationally once morest the Iranian regime and the moral police. The protestors demand that the hijab law be withdrawn and the morality police system be abolished.

Content Highlight: Iranians use sanitary pads to fight once morest the surveillance of women by gov and security force

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