How Iran’s women are being watched online - BBC Trending podcast, BBC World Service

BBC Trending

2024-10-28

17 分钟
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单集简介 ...

The Iranian government is not coy about its silence tactics. Since Iran's Woman Life Freedom Movement began on 16 September ...
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  • Welcome to BBC trending with me, Reha Khansara.

  • A word of warning before we start.

  • This episode includes some very distressing accounts of violence which Iranian women have endured at the hands of the authorities.

  • For security reasons, we've kept some details vague.

  • The testimony you're about to hear is voiced by an actor and we've changed her name to protect her identity.

  • That day I went out.

  • I put my medication and my ID in my bag and left, despite the risk.

  • I said to myself, I'll go out even if they arrest me.

  • Last year, Alif was arrested after a photo she posted online was picked up by the Iranian authorities.

  • I didn't really care enough to hide who I am or where the photo was taken.

  • I wanted to say, we exist.

  • Alif had taken off her headscarf, known as the hijab, unwrapped it from her neck and walked the streets of Iran's capital, Tehran.

  • Why did I do that?

  • Because I needed an outlet for all my pent up emotions, to share them with people who thought like me.

  • In a country where the Internet and social media is heavily regulated and surveilled, walking in public without a hijab and then documenting it for social media was seen as an act of defiance.

  • But why now?

  • The morality police was always out on the streets checking our outfits.

  • If we didn't meet their expectations, we could expect anything from verbal warnings to violence.

  • They would attack women on sidewalks, drag them into vans.

  • We witnessed all of this.