CRY FREEDOM.net

formerly known as
Womens Liberation Front

MORE INSIGHT MORE LIFE

Welcome to cryfreedom.net, formerly known as.Womens Liberation Front.  A website that hopes to draw and keeps your attention for  both the global 21th. century 3rd. feminist revolution as well and a selection of special feminist artists and writers.

This online magazine will be published evey month and started February 2019 1st. 2019. Thank you for your time and interest.

Gino d'Artali
indept investigative journalist,
radical feminist and activist

 

  

                             

 

      

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                                                                                                            CRYFREEDOM 2019/2020

Unfortunately this is a new part of the Zan, Zendagi, Azadi revolution i.e. JINA-FFF meaning FacingFaces and Facts. And the real name of Jhina was Jina Mahsa Amini.
Below you will find the gruesome menu and when you click here www.cryfreedom.net/JHINA-FFF.htm it'll bring you when I started FFF.

Gino d'Artali
Indept investigative journalist

CLICK HERE ON HOW TO READ ALL PARTS OF THIS SPECIAL DEDICATED TO JHINA MAHSA AMINI AND ALL OTHERS ASSASINATE TORTURED, WOUNDED, KIDNAPP AND/OR BEATEN TO DEATH BY IRAN'S DICTATORSHIP.

When one hurts or kills a women
one hurts or kills hummanity and is an antrocitie.
Gino d'Artali
and: My mother (1931-1997) always said to me <Mi figlio, non esistono notizie <vecchie> perche puoi imparare qualcosa da qualsiasi notizia.> Translated: <My son, there is no such thing as so called 'old' news because you can learn something from any news.>
Gianna d'Artali
Read all about the assasination of the 22 year young Jhina Mahsa Amini or Zhina Mahsa Amini (Kurdistan-Iran) and the Zan, zendagi, Azadi  (Women, life, freedom) revolution in Iran  2022-'23
and the ZZA Revolution per month: 
May--April--March--Feb--Jan 2023
covering the period of the 'Women Life Freedom' revolution in 2023 and with links to the period of  the murdering of Jina Mahsa Amini
on September 2022 'till December 2022.. 

updated 12 May 2023

EXECUTED

TORTURED (to death)    

WOUNDED AND... 

KIDNAPPED i.e. ARRESTED

BIOLOGICAL TERROR ATTACKS
Update 9 - 4 May 2023

3 May - 28 April 2023
26 -21 April 2023
14 - 8 April 2023
6 - 4 April 2023

28 - 13 March 2023
16 - 13 March 2023
10 - 6 March 2023

BLINDING AS A WEAPON
Update: BLINDED Part 10 - may-march-2023 
BLINDED Part 9 -mei-april-2023-various-crimes.htm
BLINDED (Part 8  25-17 April 2023 and 23 February 2023)

BLINDED Part 7 - 12 April 2023
BLINDED (Part 6 - 5 April 2023
BLINDED (Part 5 - 7 February 2023-
 'Eye of the dragon'

BLINDED (Part 4 - 28 - 20 March 2023)
BLINDED (Part 3 - 17 - 13 March and 17 February  2023)

BLINDED (Part 2 - 10 - 3 March and 17 January 2023)
BLINDED (Part 1 - 27 -18 February 2023)
  

:
Iranwire
17 March 2023
By Aida Ghajar
<<Blinding As A Weapon (27): A Father Of Two Shot In Both Eyes And Killed
In the series of reports <Blinding As A Weapon,> IranWire presents the victims' stories told in their own words. Some have posted their stories, along with their names and pictures, on social media. Others, whose real names shall not be disclosed to protect their safety, have told their stories to IranWire, which can make their identities and medical records available to international legal authorities.
This is the story of Seyed Javad Mousavi, a father of two young children who shot in both eyes and killed during mourning ceremonies held for another protester murdered by the security forces. After killing Mousavi, the security forces threw his body next to a water canal and laughed while riding their motorcycles nearby.
***
A lifeless body on the ground with outstretched arms and closed eyes; that's the only image of Mousavi we have after he was shot. In a short video from the scene, we can hear the laughter of security forces riding motorcycles nearby. It happened in the central city of Isfahan on November 17, 2022, during the mourning ceremonies marking the 40th day after protester Ahmad Shokrollahi was killed by paramilitary Basiji forces. Before going to work at Sepahan Steel Tubes and Pipes Factory, where he was a manager, Mousavi took to Instagram to call on protesters to attend the ceremonies for Shokrollahi. Mousavi left the factory early to join mourners in the congregation hall where the ceremonies took place. A large crowd of protesters then headed toward Shokrollahi's resting place, chanting anti-government slogans.
<Don't be Afraid....I Know him>
Security forces lobbed teargas into the crowd before officers on motorcycles chased the protesters in alleyways. Mousavi and his friends took shelter in the home of an elderly woman who had left the door to her yard open for the fleeing demonstrators. Mousavi was still in the yard when a member of the security forces climbed onto the door and shot him in the eyes. An eyewitness says Mousavi knew the assailant and said, <Don't be afraid. He is [the name]. I know him.> But the shooter pulled the trigger, without hesitating. The protesters managed to escape, while more security forces arrived and took away Mousavi's body. Mousavi was born in 1983 and was the father of a boy and a girl aged nine and five, respectively.>>
Read more here:
https://iranwire.com/en/blinding-as-a-weapon/114856-blinding-as-a-weapon-27-a-father-of-two-shot-in-the-eyes-and-killed/

Iranwire
16 March 2023
By Aida Ghajar
....
<<Blinding As A Weapon (26): Dumped In An Alleyway After Being Shot, Tortured
In the series of reports <Blinding As A Weapon,> IranWire presents the victims' stories told in their own words. Some have posted their stories, along with their names and pictures, on social media. Others, whose real names shall not be disclosed to protect their safety, have told their stories to IranWire, which can make their identities and medical records available to international legal authorities. This is the story of Parsa Ghobadi, an 18-year-old man who lost sight in both eyes after being shot by the security forces. He was also tortured during his brief detention. <It's better that you're blinded than executed,> the interrogator told Ghobadi before his pellet-ridden body was thrown into an alleyway.
***
On November 25, 2022, Iranian security forces took to the streets to celebrate the Iranian national football team's 2-0 victory over Wales in Qatar. Four days earlier, the same forces had brutally cracked down on protests that followed Iran's defeat against England amid two months of nationwide demonstrations during which hundreds of people were killed, beaten and blinded. Some protesters celebrated the football defeat in Qatar because they viewed the Iranian team as the Islamic Republic's team, not Iran's. That night, Parsa Ghobadi, who had turned 18 on October 27, joined his friends in a neighborhood in the western city of Kermanshah and shouted anti-government slogans. A plainclothesman fired at Ghobadi's face and blinded his two eyes. While blood was running down his face, he tried to escape but the forces of suppression shot him multiple times in the back and filled his body with pellets.
<It's better that you're blinded than executed>
Several agents beat and handcuffed Ghobadi as he was laying on the ground, and took him to an unknown location. During his interrogation, Ghobadi received fist and kick blows and was hit with rifle butts. As the young man was keeping his mouth shut, they also used a taser and burned his right arm that was already filled with pellets. Finally, they forcibly opened his mouth and poured water down his throat to get his name and address. The interrogator threatened Ghobadi with prison and execution but, in the end, he told him, <It's better that you're blinded than executed.> The same night, Ghobadi was thrown into an alleyway near his home.
Eyes Torn to Pieces
Seven pellets tore through an eyeball and lodged near the bone in the back of the eye. The other eye was not in much better shape, and the doctors told Ghobadi that the pellets could never be removed from his eyes. Ghobadi was taken to the hospital in Kermanshah. The doctors first said that both his eyes must be emptied out because his eyeballs were torn to pieces and suggested re-placing the eyeballs with glass eyeballs. In the end, however, they cleaned the eyes, kept him hospitalized for a week and treated him with tranquilizers and antibiotics until he could be transferred to Tehran for treatment. Over the past three months, Ghobadi has repeatedly been taken from Kermanshah to Tehran and back. His left eye cannot see at all and the vision in his right eye is so blurry that he cannot distinguish between colors or between light and shade. The doctors have not given him a clear diagnosis. Both his eyeballs are full of pellet holes, and he is suffering from kidney malfunction as well.>>
Read more here:
https://iranwire.com/en/blinding-as-a-weapon/114835-blinding-as-a-weapon-26-dumped-in-an-alleyway-after-being-shot-tortured/


Iranwire
14 March 2023
By Solmaz Eikdar
<<Blinding As A Weapon (24): Amiri's Injured Eye, A <Proof Of Honor>
....
In the series of reports <Blinding As A Weapon,> IranWire presents the victims' stories told in their own words. Some have posted their stories, along with their names and pictures, on social media. Others, whose real names shall not be disclosed to protect their safety, have told their stories to IranWire, which can make their identities and medical records available to international legal authorities. This is the story of Raheleh Amini, a 29-year-old psychologist from the southeastern city of Kerman who still finds reasons to <feel good> after being shot in the left eye.
***
<I swear to the hope that grows from within despair that all will be set right,> Amini wrote on her Instagram page. <I know that life has become hard, but don't set fire to the roots of hope in your heart. Let it stay green,> she said in another story. Amiri took to Instagram to inform the public about the eye injury she sustained during protests on November 15, 2022. She later removed
her posts related to the incident before deleting her account altogether. But some of her postings have been shared by other social media users. According to information received by IranWire, some of those who wrote on social media about the eye injuries they had sustained during protests have been threatened by security agencies to remain silent. Some have been arrested or have pledged to a judge that they would not talk about their ordeal.
Hoping for <Good Days> Ahead
Nearly two months after being shot by a member of the paramilitary Basij force, Amiri posted a picture of the location where it happened and wrote that she needed all her strength to be able to return there: <One month and 20 days ago I was standing exactly here when a Basiji kid decided to shoot me in the eye and take the light away from my eye.> Amiri was accompanied by Elaheh Tavakolian, another young woman who was shot in the eye. <We sat on the bench facing this wall,> she wrote. <Elaheh and I chatted and laughed, and I was thinking that God must love me to let me meet the best people from the very first night.> In one of her posts, Amiri joyfully thanked the public for paying attention to the victims of targeted shootings and wrote, <With one eye or two eyes, we must see the beautiful days of Lady Iran.>
She celebrated the feeling that she has become <the beloved of a nation> after sustaining her eye injury.
Amiri's Eye <Glows with Honor>
Amiri views her lost eye as a <proof of honor.>
She posted a picture of herself in front of a mirror and wrote, <These days, when I look in the mirror, my right eye is much smaller than the left one but, to tell the truth, I am in love with my right eye because it glows with honor.> Amiri said that the difficult days that followed the incident made her stronger. Raheleh posted pictures of herself from the days before the shooting and wrote, <Now, after two months, I'm not tired of being strong, I have come back even stronger than before and I'm going to start from the beginning all over again.> >>
Read more here:
https://iranwire.com/en/blinding-as-a-weapon/114763-blinding-as-a-weapon-24-amiris-injured-eye-a-proof-of-honor/

Iranwire
13 March 2023
By Aida Ghajar
<<Blinding As A Weapon (23): Looking For A Miracle
....
In the series of reports <Blinding As A Weapon,> IranWire presents the victims' stories told in their own words. Some have posted their stories, along with their names and pictures, on social media. Others, whose real names shall not be disclosed to protect their safety, have told their stories to IranWire, which can make their identities and medical records available to international legal authorities. This is the story of Iman, a 34-year-old man who sold his car, his only source of income, to pay for the treatment of his injured eye. His nine-year-old boy is now hoping for some miracle that would return his father's eye and a sense of security that every child deserves.
***
<The sun is beautiful so don't blindfold me/ A Lur boy fights until death like a lion>
The line comes from <Mother, Mother: The Time for War is Here,> a song that has been repeatedly sung during nationwide protests triggered by the death of Mahsa Amini in the custody of morality police in September 2022. It is an adaptation of a folksong of the Lurs, an ethnic group that lives mainly in the western province of Lorestan. Iman was shot in a city in Lorestan in late October, after a month and a half of anti-government protests and brutal crackdown by security forces. He was attending a rally when security forces riding motorcycles and on foot, clad in black and wearing masks, started shooting teargas and pellets at the crowd. Iman was hit by at least 60 pellets and suddenly everything went dark. One pellet went through his right eyeball and lodged next to the sixth cranial nerve that directs the rotation of the eye. The projectile can't be removed, and the eye lost its vision. He was not able to move the other eye for months.
And his Eye Went Dark....
The pellets that had not penetrated deeply into his body were removed at home, one by one, by squeezing them out. The one that had lodged into one ear was removed by surgery. Nearly five months after being shot, Iman's eyes cannot tolerate light. The eyelid of the injured eye has fallen, and whenever he looks up, both his eyes get tired and the eyes fall.>>
Read more here:
https://iranwire.com/en/blinding-as-a-weapon/114724-blinding-as-a-weapon-23-looking-for-a-miracle/
Gino d'Artali: Please do read his whole story to support him as well as the other victims portrayed in this series of Iranwire. Shukrah.

Iranwire
13 March 2023
By Solmaz Eikdar
<<Blinding As A Weapon (22): Zand, The Shining Light Of Hope
....
In the series of reports <Blinding As A Weapon,> IranWire presents the victims' stories told in their own words. Some have posted their stories, along with their names and pictures, on social media. Others, whose real names shall not be disclosed to protect their safety, have told their stories to IranWire, which can make their identities and medical records available to international legal authorities. This is the story of Kimia Zand, a 26-year-old woman who lost an eye to a paintball directly fired at her by security forces. <More terrifying than blindness is to see with both eyes what they are doing to our country,> Zand wrote on Instagram.
***
Her pictures on Instagram with a smiling face and a bouquet of red roses that she is holding over her lost eye have become symbols of the Islamic Republic's defeat in its war against hope and beauty.
A paintball gun, also called a paintball marker, uses compressed gas or air to shoot dye-filled gel capsules called paintballs. This weapon has been extensively used during protests triggered by the September death of 22-year-old Mahsa Amini in the custody of morality police. Reports show that security forces have replaced the usual dye-filled gel capsules in these guns with metal or hard plastic pellets used in shotguns.>>
Read more here:
https://iranwire.com/en/blinding-as-a-weapon/114719-blinding-as-a-weapon-22-zand-the-shining-light-of-hope/

Iranwire
14 February 2023
By Aida Ghajar
<<Blinding As A Weapon (9): Shahin, Shot with at Least 90 Pellets
....
In this series of reports, IranWire presents the victims' stories told in their own words. Some have posted their stories, along with their names and pictures, on social media. Others, whose real names shall not be disclosed to protect their safety, have told their stories to IranWire. IranWire can make their identities and medical situations available to international legal authorities. This is the story of a Kurdish man who wants to be called Shahin to protect his identity.
***
Shahin has at least 90 lead pellets lodged in his body after being wounded on September 22, 2022. His face alone holds 20 pellets, two in his eyes. He was shot from 10 meters. Doctors say that lead pellets are carcinogens and must be removed from his body, at the cost of a million tomans (about $24) per pellet. But the two pellets that went through his eye and destroyed of the retina cannot be taken out as they have penetrated too deeply into Shahin's body.
Pictures of Shahin at the hospital tell a horrifying story. His eyeball protrudes from its socket and the doctors were forced to stitch the eyelids together so that, perhaps, his eyeball would return to its normal position. Kurdistan has always endured extra security measures under the Islamic Republic and IranWire must keep Shahin's identity and medical records confidential, especially since in recent weeks security agencies have summoned and threatened many inju-red protesters, to silence them.
Chased by a Drone After Being Shot
....
It was getting dark and units of the riot police, on foot and on motorcycles, were cracking down on protesters across Sanandaj, the capital of Kurdistan province. Shahin was among the protesters. The security forces were executing a pincer movement on the crowds, with motorcycles approaching from one side and those on foot from the other side. Shahin and several other protesters entered a side street. <The policemen on foot followed us into that side street,> he says. <The street had been blocked a hundred meters from me. I was stuck between the policemen and those who had blocked the street. I ran into an alley. When I was 10 meters into the alley I heard one of the agents shouting <Go into the alley.> I turned my head to see if they were chasing me. Then I saw him raising the gun and he shot directly at me. I saw a flash and fell to the ground. I put my hand over my eye and it was filled with blood. A resident opened the door to his house and Shahin and other protesters ran into the yard. His hand was filled with blood. There was an old bathroom on the side of the yard. Shahin ran to the bathroom, held his head under water and tried to wash the blood off his face. <I returned from the bathroom to the yard,> say Shahin. <A sound was coming from the sky, and when I looked up, I saw a drone. I threw myself back into the bathroom. It took only a few seconds for the policemen to arrive outside the house. They waited five minutes, calling us out. They got no answer, and everyone was silent. The police went and the drone moved away. I stayed there for half an hour, then I called my friends, they came and we left the neighborhood.>
Three Surgeries, Two Pellets Out, Two Pellets In
Like many other injured protesters, Shahin avoided going to a government hospital. His friends took him to a private clinic. The nurses and the doctors locked the doors to the clinic and the opera-ting room. They washed his injuries and his eyes. In the end, howe-ver, on the advice of the doctors, Shahin left for Tehran because of inadequate medical facilities in Sanandaj and the security umbrella over the city.>>
Read more here |which tells us more about how surgeons in Tehran worked hard to <Shahin's treatment continues but, after his latest examination, the doctors told him that, at best, they might be able to restore another 10 percent of the vision to his injured eye.>:
https://iranwire.com/en/politics/113777-blinding-as-a-weapon-09-shahin-shot-with-at-least-90-pellets/
 

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Liberation Front 2019/cryfreedom.net 2023