By Le Figaro with AFP
Published
1 hour ago,
updated at 11:22 a.m.
The Minister of Science, Research and Technology affirmed that the student was not excluded from her university.
This Wednesday, the Iranian Minister of Science, Research and Technology, Hossein Simaei, affirmed that the behavior of the Iranian woman who undressed in public on Saturday in front of a university in Tehran is «immoral». “She broke the norms and her behavior was not based on sharia (Islamic law, Editor’s note), it was immoral and contrary to customs”declared Mr. Simaei, on the sidelines of a government meeting, adding that the student did not “not” was excluded from her university.
The video of the young woman in her underwear, first sitting and then walking slowly in front of Azad University in Tehran, went viral last weekend on social networks. Media in Iran broadcast images of the scene, blurring the young girl. “Those who republished these images propagated prostitution”castigated Hossein Simaei, believing that this gesture was not justified “neither on the moral level nor on the religious level”.
“Mental disorders”
“The motivations and reasons for this student’s action are the subject of an investigation”Azad University public relations manager Amir Mahjoub said on Saturday. “University security intervened and handed her over to the police station”he wrote on the social network X blocked in Iran, claiming that the student was “under great pressure and suffered from mental disorders”.
In an unusual statement, the Iranian embassy in France assured that “this student suffered from certain family problems and fragile psychological conditions”. “Signs of abnormal behavior had already been observed by those around him”underlines the press release.
Iranian government spokesperson Fatemeh Mohajerani on Wednesday denied reports that the student had been brutally arrested. The foreign-based organization Amnesty International says the student “removed her clothes to protest against the abusive application of the compulsory wearing of the veil by security agents” of the university. Since the establishment of the Islamic Republic in 1979, the law in Iran has imposed a strict dress code on women, who are required to wear headscarves and loose clothing that conceals their shapes.
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