Middle East & Africa | Women lead the way

Iran’s ruling ayatollahs are hanging on

But if protests endure, the regime may yet wobble

Iranian women remove their headscarf and clash with police during protest for Mahsa Amini, a woman who died after being arrested by the Islamic republic's "morality police", in Tehran. Fresh protests broke out on September 19 in Iran over the death of a young woman who had been arrested by the "morality police" that enforces a strict dress code, local media reported. Public anger has grown since authorities on Friday announced the death of Mahsa Amini, 22, in a hospital after three days in a coma, following her arrest by Tehran's morality police during a visit to the capital on September 13. Tehran, Iran on September 22, 2022. Photo by SalamPix/ABACAPRESS.COM
|Dubai

The female protesters who are burning their headscarves all across Iran liken themselves to gazelles crossing a river infested with crocodiles. Riot police may pick off many of them, they admit, but the herd will reach salvation. They will bait the regime and its security forces by dancing, baring their hair and torching the ubiquitous posters of the reigning ayatollahs and generals. Many of the demonstrators have been shot, beaten and carted away. But after nearly a fortnight of protests the defiance persists. Disturbances have spread across every province in the country. They have been the biggest for years. A post circulating on social media declares: “From now on, Iran will be known for its women, not for its carpets, its saffron or its cats.”

This article appeared in the Middle East & Africa section of the print edition under the headline “Women lead the way”

How not to run a country

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