From the funerals of religious turmoil … Iran’s demonstrators broke the banned

From the funerals of religious turmoil … Iran’s demonstrators broke the banned

Muhsa Amini, a young woman who died in her second month, was the target of the widespread protests that took place in Iran. Despite threats, assurances, and fiery campaigns, the demonstrators, particularly those from the young section, are still uniting the authorities with all of their might.
The country has seen a number of protests over the past 20 years, but the present movement frequently violates the laws.

Many observers noted a new trend during these protests, which was represented by young people removing the turbans from clergy members’ heads as they walked through the streets, in opposition to attempts to control the country’s religious leaders through rule, as well as people’s travels, attire, and ideologies.

Numerous images of the leader Ali Khamenei and his predecessor, Ruhullah Khomeini, painted in crimson in the holy city of Qom have circulated on social media during the past few weeks.
Also, the funerals of the detainees, who were arrested by the authorities during the demonstrations, were subsequently killed, or who were shot dead by security during the marches in the streets and universities, into stations challenging the authorities.

According to France Press, if a person’s death is remembered on their forty-day anniversary, the funeral service becomes a protest.
Perhaps the latest evidence of this issue, what the main city of Senndge witnessed in the northwestern governorate of Kurdistan during the funeral of Sarina Saidi, the 16 -year -old, who was killed during protest movements.

Where its funeral turned into a protest in which the participants raised anti -regime chants, while women took off their veil, according to the Humao Human Rights Organization, which is based in Norway.
Khamenei experienced the “death of the dictator” as well.

Likewise, university students’ strikes in the capital, Tehran, have turned into moments of challenging the rule, with the co -shouts of the participants “Death to the dictator” or “Your hands stained with blood”, and “I will kill someone who kills my brother”!
According to reports, protests throughout the nation have not subsided since Amini was assassinated on September 16, 2022, three days after she was detained by the Ethics Police.

Her passing has since stoked the flames of resentment over a number of issues, including the limitations placed on individual freedoms and stringent regulations governing women’s attire, as well as the living and economic crisis that the Iranian people experience, not to mention the extremist laws imposed by the system of government and its overall political and religious makeup.

Iran’s protesters tore down the forbidden religious symbols from the funerals of racial unrest.

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Egypt