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Deepa Parent, The Guardian

Iranian regime accused of raping and violating protesters as young as 12

Amnesty International report details ‘harrowing’ testimonies of survivors at hands of security forces following nationwide protests


Iranian police on motorbikes at a protest in Tehran after Mahsa Amini died last year at the hands of police after being arrested for how she was wearing her hijab. Photograph: AFP/Getty

Iranian security forces used rape and sexual violence to torture, punish and inflict lasting physical and psychological damage on protesters as young as 12 during the country’s nationwide protests last year, a report says.


The report by Amnesty International is based on the testimonies of 12 women, 26 men, one girl and six boys who survived rape or other forms of sexual violence. Six survivors of rape were subjected to gang rapes by up to 10 male state agents, according to Amnesty.


Protests spread across the country after the death in custody of a 22-year-old Kurdish woman, Mahsa Amini, in September 2022 following her detention for allegedly breaking the country’s strict dress code.

Security officials have arrested more than 19,000 people, and at least 500 protesters have been killed. These included children, according to human rights groups that have documented the torture and sexual abuse inflicted on those arrested.


Some of the victims interviewed by Amnesty said they were sexually assaulted at the time of arrest, in police vehicles while they were being taken to detention, and while in detention. The report also details the accounts of two men who were raped with batons or glass bottles.


People running from police at a protest after Mahsa Amini died. Security officials have arrested more than 19,000 people, with at least 500 protesters killed. Photograph: Anadolu/Getty

In February 2023, a young Iranian woman told the Guardian she was blindfolded, stripped naked and penetrated by an object. She was later treated for a vaginal infection, and believed the object used to rape her was a glass bottle.


“He kept touching me everywhere and then took an object and inserted it inside my vagina. He kept penetrating me with the object while with the other hand he was rubbing all over my body. I froze and was still in pain from the punches I had received during interrogation. I lay there for I don’t know how long. He then left.”


The report revealed that the perpetrators of rape and sexual violence included agents from the Revolutionary Guards (IRGC), the volunteer paramilitary Basij force, which operates under the IRGC, and the Ministry of Intelligence, as well as branches of the police including the Public Security police, the police investigation unit, and special forces.


Agnès Callamard, Amnesty International’s secretary general, said: “The harrowing testimonies we collected point to a wider pattern in the use of sexual violence as a key weapon in the Iranian authorities’ armoury of repression.”


Mahdi Yaghoubi, 31, was arrested in November 2022 during protests in Tehran and told the Guardian how the security forces sexually assaulted him. “They touched and squeezed my genital parts to put me under pressure to confess,” he said.


“They didn’t do that to embarrass me, or rape me. They did that as a method of painful torture. They wanted me to suffer and feel the pain.


He added: “They used words like begheyrat [a man with no self-respect] to humiliate us for not protecting the honour of our sisters. All the men arrested were called this to provoke us and humiliate us.”


Yaghoubi managed to flee from Iran on the back of a lorry along with his sister, Mina, 32, who was also violently tortured in detention.


Several Iranian protesters who fled to Turkey during the protests were secretly treated for the trauma of sexual violence while in detention by a group of therapists.


One survivor, who still lives in Iran, told the Guardian. “I still see flashes of the security agents violently touching my breasts with the intention of hurting me. I may not be bruised any more, but I feel physically ill each time I think about the incident.”



 

2023, The Guardian

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