IRAN: A WOMAN OF RESISTANCE
BBC Point News Update:
IRAN: A WOMAN OF RESISTANCE
Iran has continued protest demonstrations last week. Thousands of Iranian people have gone on the streets protesting against the government's corruption, unemployment and the weak economy.
Despite strict restrictions on social media, some videos and photos have been shared online, in which protesters can be seen to hang on the buildings and targeting security personnel.
The authorities blocked the Instagram and Messaging application telegram so that calls and photos and videos of protest can not be shared online but many photos were viewed online.
The photographs of the photos were most of them, in a photograph, by removing a woman's white scarves, apparently against the Islamic government, waving a stick. Although this picture is original but it was not taken during recent protests.
These protests started on December 28 from Iran's second major city of Mashhad, and soon spread it to other small cities. The demonstrators demanded the removal of the rule of the high-ranking Ayatollah Khamenei of the country.
The first image of the Iranian woman, Christian Ali, a Christian journalist, posted a day before the start of the demonstration on social media.
Christ is a female-based female activist and is the founder of two social media campaigns, My Stephen Freedom and Whitewidths.
Mai Stalthy Freddham encourages Iranian women to post their photos and videos without the scarf used in public places. White Wooden Dies began in the year 2017 and it demands women to use white clothes as protest against strict rules of clothing every Wednesday.
Christ Aliinejad posted a woman's photo on her instagram account and described the process as a part of the White Widgets Day campaign.
On that same day the film was closed on Tehran's busy highway Khyber Pakhtunkhwa revolution, authorities announced in the capital that women who had not seen the head of the head without being arrested were not arrested.
Those women who do not cover their head in the right way will now participate in Islamic educational classes.
Images and videos of a scanned wavy ladder woman on a canber were shared with those people who did not believe that reforms would reach here, and anti-government protesters who misunderstood the power of religious leaders Were victims of
As a result, this young woman became a face of protests in Iran, where hundreds of women have participated. Many stars called this lady 'Rosa Park' of Iran.
A famous Twitter user wrote in Persian: "The girl standing against the mandatory ruler has become a symbol of civil disobedience and resistance to Iranian women. Rosa Park is not in front of the liar.
People also gave tribute to this unfaithful woman. A Twitter user said that the container has been placed on the board, which was based on its stand by protest.
Although the identity and fate of this young woman is unknown, but she has become a symbol of hope and hope in anti-government protests.
They are not the first Iranian women to face the face of any political crisis in Iran.
In April 2009, the video of Nada Agha Sultan's death in the aftermath of the controversial presidential election gained international attention.
IRAN: A WOMAN OF RESISTANCE
Iran has continued protest demonstrations last week. Thousands of Iranian people have gone on the streets protesting against the government's corruption, unemployment and the weak economy.
Despite strict restrictions on social media, some videos and photos have been shared online, in which protesters can be seen to hang on the buildings and targeting security personnel.
The authorities blocked the Instagram and Messaging application telegram so that calls and photos and videos of protest can not be shared online but many photos were viewed online.
The photographs of the photos were most of them, in a photograph, by removing a woman's white scarves, apparently against the Islamic government, waving a stick. Although this picture is original but it was not taken during recent protests.
These protests started on December 28 from Iran's second major city of Mashhad, and soon spread it to other small cities. The demonstrators demanded the removal of the rule of the high-ranking Ayatollah Khamenei of the country.
The first image of the Iranian woman, Christian Ali, a Christian journalist, posted a day before the start of the demonstration on social media.
Christ is a female-based female activist and is the founder of two social media campaigns, My Stephen Freedom and Whitewidths.
Mai Stalthy Freddham encourages Iranian women to post their photos and videos without the scarf used in public places. White Wooden Dies began in the year 2017 and it demands women to use white clothes as protest against strict rules of clothing every Wednesday.
Christ Aliinejad posted a woman's photo on her instagram account and described the process as a part of the White Widgets Day campaign.
On that same day the film was closed on Tehran's busy highway Khyber Pakhtunkhwa revolution, authorities announced in the capital that women who had not seen the head of the head without being arrested were not arrested.
Those women who do not cover their head in the right way will now participate in Islamic educational classes.
Images and videos of a scanned wavy ladder woman on a canber were shared with those people who did not believe that reforms would reach here, and anti-government protesters who misunderstood the power of religious leaders Were victims of
As a result, this young woman became a face of protests in Iran, where hundreds of women have participated. Many stars called this lady 'Rosa Park' of Iran.
A famous Twitter user wrote in Persian: "The girl standing against the mandatory ruler has become a symbol of civil disobedience and resistance to Iranian women. Rosa Park is not in front of the liar.
People also gave tribute to this unfaithful woman. A Twitter user said that the container has been placed on the board, which was based on its stand by protest.
Although the identity and fate of this young woman is unknown, but she has become a symbol of hope and hope in anti-government protests.
They are not the first Iranian women to face the face of any political crisis in Iran.
In April 2009, the video of Nada Agha Sultan's death in the aftermath of the controversial presidential election gained international attention.
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