Iranian student harassed for not wearing headscarf strips down on campus
By Akhtar Makoii
A female student at a university in Tehran stripped to her underwear in an act of protest after being harassed by campus security officers over her hijab.
Videos circulating widely on social media show the unidentified student sitting outside the campus in her underwear while the security guards surrounded her.
Another video shows her walking around the campus in her bra and knickers while stunned fellow students film her on their mobile phones.
Her act of resistance began after a confrontation inside Azad University’s science and research centre on Saturday, when security forces physically attacked the student because she was not wearing a headscarf.
In protest to having her clothes torn, she chose to remove her remaining garments, according to an Iranian student social media news channel, the Amir Kabir newsletter and witnesses who spoke to the London Telegraph.
Multiple witnesses confirmed her subsequent detention by the authorities.
Officers forcibly detain student
About 10 security guards were captured on video forcibly bundling the young woman into a vehicle. The footage showed a group of officers overwhelming her before she was detained.
“Oh God, how many of them are attacking just one person?” one onlooker was heard saying. “I can’t believe what I’m seeing,” another said.
“Around noon, near the entrance of the faculty, I saw a girl being grabbed and forcibly taken by security forces,” one witness told Telegraph from Tehran.
“She wasn’t wearing a headscarf. Then they reached the security building near the entrance, where a male and a female security guard grabbed her and tried to take her into the office with force.
“She resisted, and her hoodie was torn off her body, it made her very angry and she took off the rest of her clothes.
“She angrily yelled at them and took off her trousers – she sat outside the campus for a few minutes and the officer became more aggressive.
“I couldn’t see much but, a few minutes after she started walking, several plain-clothes officers ambushed her and forced her into a car.”
Student media outlets reported that she suffered injuries during the arrest, including severe head trauma after being struck against a vehicle. Witnesses said traces of blood were visible at the scene.
#Girl of Science and Research
The footage has been widely shared in Iran and the student has already become a powerful symbol of resistance, drawing nationwide attention under the hashtag: “Girl of Science and Research”.
“If courage had a face,” one user posted on X with the girl’s picture. “That brave girl is my leader,” another user wrote.
Amir Mahjoub, the director of public relations at the university, said that she was transferred to a “police station” and claimed that she was under “severe mental stress and suffering from psychological disorders”.
The Farhikhtegan newspaper, affiliated with the university, also claimed, citing “official and unofficial sources” that the student has “severe psychological and mental issues”.
The report added that, after being handed over to the police by university security staff, she was hospitalised in a psychiatric facility.
There has been no further information about her whereabouts or condition.
Amnesty International has urged Iranian authorities to release the young woman “immediately and unconditionally”.
It is not the first time that officials and media affiliated with the Islamic Republic have accused protesters of “mental disorders” and forcibly placed them in psychiatric institutions. The protest echoes earlier acts of civil disobedience, notably that of Vida Movahed, known as “the Girl of Enghelab Street”.
That show of defiance gained international attention in 2017 when a woman removed her headscarf and held it aloft on the tip of a stick while standing to protest against the mandatory hijab.
Observers have drawn parallels between these demonstrations, viewing them as key moments in Iranian women’s ongoing struggle for personal freedoms.
After the September 2022 death in custody of 22-year-old Mahsa Amini, and the subsequent protests, Iranian universities have also faced heightened repression and intensified control. The protests led to acts of civil disobedience by Iranian women and girls against the mandatory hijab.
New stricter laws
All women in Iran must conceal their hair with a headscarf and wear loose-fitting trousers under their coats while in public but a growing number of Iranian women have appeared in public without head coverings.
Iranian police and security forces have intensified their enforcement of the rules. A new bill making its way through Iran’s parliament is set to harden the regulations governing how women and men can dress in public, but authorities have started enforcing it before its formal approval.
Article 50 of the bill says anyone found “naked, semi-naked, or wearing clothing deemed improper in public” will be immediately arrested and handed over to judicial authorities.
The bill also implements gender segregation across a wide range of settings, including universities, hospitals, educational and administrative centres, parks and tourist sites.
People found in breach of the new rules also face a ban on leaving the country and using social media for a period of six months to two years.
“These girls will one day bring down Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, Iran’s future belongs to free women, not the mullahs,” a Tehran student said.
“She’ll be remembered as a hero by many women,” she said of the girl who protested on Saturday. “After this regime falls, her picture will be everywhere in Iran, like Mahsa Amin’s and many more.”
The Telegraph, London