Mahsa Amini protests
| Mahsa Amini protests | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Part of the Iranian protests against compulsory hijab, the aftermath of the death of Mahsa Amini and Gen Z protests | |||
| Date | 16 September 2022 – 2023 | ||
| Location | Iran, with solidarity rallies worldwide | ||
| Caused by | Death of Mahsa Amini | ||
| Goals | Revolution, civil, political, and women's rights reform, other reforms such as the dissolution of the Guidance Patrol, and justice for Mahsa Amini's death | ||
| Methods | Demonstrations, strikes, civil disobedience, civil resistance, riots | ||
| Resulted in | Protest failure: hundreds of people killed and tens of thousands beaten and/or detained in government crackdown | ||
| Parties | |||
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| Lead figures | |||
No centralized leadership
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| Casualties | |||
| Deaths | At least 551 protesters including 68 minors killed (Iran Human Rights) as of 15 September 2023 200 killed (state media) as of 3 December 2022 See casualties for details. | ||
| Arrested | As many as 19,262 (HRANA, as of 6 January 2023). See detainees for notable cases. | ||
Civil unrest and protests against the government of the Islamic Republic of Iran associated with the death in police custody of Mahsa Amini (Persian: مهسا امینی) began on 16 September 2022 and carried on into 2023, but by spring 2023, the protests had largely subsided, ultimately leaving the political leadership unchanged and firmly entrenched in power. The protests were described as "unlike any the country had seen before", the "biggest challenge" to the government, and "most widespread revolt" since the Islamic Revolution in 1979.
Amini was arrested by the Guidance Patrol on 13 September 2022 for allegedly violating Iran's mandatory hijab law by wearing her hijab "improperly" while visiting Tehran from Saqqez. According to eyewitnesses, she was severely beaten by Guidance Patrol officers (this was denied by Iranian authorities). She subsequently collapsed, was hospitalized and died three days later. As the protests spread from Amini's hometown of Saqqez to other cities in the Iranian Kurdistan and throughout Iran, the government responded with widespread Internet blackouts, nationwide restrictions on social media usage, tear gas and gunfire.
Although the protests have not been as deadly as those in 2019 (when more than 1,500 were killed), they have been "nationwide, spread across social classes, universities, the streets [and] schools". At least 551 people, including 68 minors, had been killed as a result of the government's intervention in the protests, as of 15 September 2023. Before February 2023 when most were pardoned, an estimated 19,262 were arrested across at least 134 cities and towns and 132 universities.
Female protesters, including schoolchildren, have played a key role in the demonstrations. In addition to demands for increased rights for women, the protests have demanded the overthrow of the Islamic Republic, setting them apart from previous major protest movements in Iran, which have focused on election results or economic woes. The government's response to the protests and its "brutal and disproportionate use of force against peaceful protesters and children" was widely condemned, but Supreme Leader of Iran Ali Khamenei dismissed the unrest as "riots" and part of a "hybrid war" against Iran created by foreign enemy states and dissidents abroad.
On 2 February 2024, the UN Human Rights Council's Fact-Finding Mission released a report which found the Iranian regime committed systematic crimes against humanity.