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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
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
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BLINDING AS A
WEAPON |
Iranwire
28 March 2023
<<Iranian Who Lost Eye In Protest Seen On Migrant Boat Heading To Greece
Zaniar Tondro, an 18-year-old Iranian protester who lost sight in one eye after
being by security forces, was allegedly filmed on a crowded boat while trying to
illegally migrate to Europe to seek medical treatment. The video, which went
viral on social media, purportedly shows Tondro laying on a boat with a safety
jacket on him and surrounded by other migrants. The latest information about the
boat came on March 25, when a passenger said the Greek marine police were
approaching. According to activists, security forces fired at Tondro during
protests in the northwestern city of Piranshahr in November 2022. The young man
lost sight in his right eye after 11 pellets hit his head. Hundreds of Iranians
have sustained severe eye injuries after being hit by pellets, tear gas
cannisters, paintball bullets or other projectiles fired by security forces amid
a brutal crackdown on more than six months of nationwide protests.>>
Read more here:
https://iranwire.com/en/news/115069-iranian-who-lost-eye-in-protest-seen-on-migrant-boat-heading-to-greece/
Opinion by Gino d'Artali: Read also here more on how I report about blinding
protesters with pellet shooting
Iranwire
20 March 2023
By Aida Ghajar
....
<<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 Hamid Reza Panahi, a young man who
describes himself as a <Rose facing rifles> on his Instagram page. The targeted
shooting by security forces caused him to lose his left eye on November 16,
2022. He then resigned from his job and moved out of the neighborhood.
***
Strikes were called on November 16 both to commemorate November 2019 protest
victims and to join the nationwide demonstrations against the Islamic Republic.
As Panahi went to work in the Iron Market in the Shad Abad neighborhood of
Tehran, he had no idea what awaited him there.
<Please Don't Take Us>
Panahi was among a group of protesters who had gathered in a passageway,
chanting slogans. Some of the security forces massed outside the closed doors of
the passageway were known to shop owners as <neighborhood kids.> Amid tear gas
and shootings, agents of suppression forced the doors open and entered the
passageway. Panahi and tens of other demonstrators reached the rooftop, where
the shooting continued. Everything turned black and he fell when his right eye
was hit by pellets. Upon regaining con-sciousness, Panahi rubbed his face and
felt swelling in his eye. Security agents had disappeared. They might have
thought Panahi was dead. The young man managed to get into a bathroom in the
passageway and hide there. It was about noon. After a while, security forces
rushed into the bathroom and slammed the stall doors. However, they failed to
kick open the door behind which Panahi was hiding. Before leaving, the agents
threw teargas into the bathroom and Panahi could hear his friends pleading,
<Please don't take us. I swear we didn't do anything.> Panahi stood alone in the
darkness for an hour or two. He then heard his friends talking and opened the
door, but he immediately lost consciousness.
<That's What you Get for Rioting>
Panahi was hospitalized the same night and underwent surgery the following day.
Pellets had penetrated his right eyeball and lodged in his forehead. One will
remain behind the eyeball forever. After a few days, the doctor came to Panahi
and said, <You're discharged.> The patient asked whether his vision would come
back or not, and the doctor answered, <You're blind and that's it! That's what
you get for rioting.> Panahi's right eyeball was not removed. The eyelid of his
left eye is now drooping. For two weeks, Panahi was unable to sleep, and he
remembers voices he heard in the bathroom. While still suffering nightmares
months after the incident, losing an eye was not the end of his ordeal. The
paramilitary Basij force in the neighborhood did not stop harassing Panahi. As
a result, the young man sold everything he owned, quit his job and moved to a
new neighborhood. He visits his mother around midnight and leaves the
neighborhood before dawn whenever he wants to see her. <I know who shot at Ahmad
Reza's eye. He is probably not even 18,> according to a friend of Panahi.
As IranWire has reported, the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps and its
affiliated Basij force extensively use children aged between 12 and 17 to
suppress protests.>>
Source:
https://iranwire.com/en/blinding-as-a-weapon/114919-blinding-as-a-weapon-29-forced-to-move-house-under-pressure-after-losing-an-eye/
Opinion by Gino d'Artali: I'll keep saying it: Allah sees and hears all untill
also in this case like in other equal cases the basij and the irgc will pay a
high price.
Iranwire
20 March 2023
By Aida Ghajar
<<Blinding As A Weapon (28): <My Eye For A Free Iran> Is His Motto
....
IranWire presents victims' stories in a series of reports titled <Blinding As A
Weapon.> Some victims 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 Ali Zare, a 23-year-old man from the northwestern city of
Ardebil who experienced six months of pain and loneliness after losing his right
eye during protests in Tehran. After losing his eye, he also lost his job as a
laborer in Tehran's bazaar. <My eye for a free Iran> is the slogan emblazoned at
the top of his Instagram page.
***
As he did the previous night, Zare came out of his home in Tehran's Nazi Abad
neighborhood on October 7, 2022, to take part in anti-government protests. When
security forces began shooting, a pellet scratched the corner of his eye.
Although the injury was not serious, it was a precursor to what was to come. A
fellow protester took Zare to his home and cleaned the injury. The young man
returned to the streets with a friend and joined other protesters who were
chanting anti-government slogans. The scene was filled with smoke, fire and
security forces. A plastic pellet tore through Zare's eye. He fell to the
ground, crying out in pain. Other protesters pulled Zare away. He asked about
his bleeding eye. <No, bro! Your eye is there,> a person next to him said. The
eye was still there, but the vision was gone. A woman who introduced herself as
a nurse took Zare to her home, washed off the blood, cleaned the eye and put
some drops in it. Zare returned home by 4 a.m. He didn't tell his family
anything. Until morning, he struggled with pain in his room.
Treatment Delayed, Wrong Diagnosis
For 10 days, Zare refused to visit hospitals with his family because they were
crowded with security personnel. In the end, he was ope-rated on at Tehran's
Farabi Hospital on October 16. At the time, the doctors recommended stitching
the cornea and implanting an artificial lens in his eye. They said his vision
could have been restored if he had come sooner. After three months of pain, the
second surgery was performed on February 1. The ophthalmologists discovered that
the retina was damaged and filled with blood. They removed the blood and
injected gel into the eye to reattach the retina. Zare spent 24 hours in the
hospital before returning home. He had to sleep on his belly for a week. Dr.
Rouzbeh Esfandiari, a former doctor with Tehran Emergency Services, tells
IranWire, <If the diagnosis had been correct on the first day, or if they had
suspected that the retina had detached and had begun treatment with silicon oil
injections into the eye, further complications would most likely have been
prevented.>
....
Need for Continued Support
Months after the shooting, Zare's injured eye still burns when the sun is bright
or when he looks at the snow. He gets the same burning sensation when he tries
to open his right eye due to the drooping eyelid. His right eye has only enough
vision to differentiate between day and night. One of the first feelings victims
like Zare experience is loneliness. Shahrzad Pourabdollah, a psychotherapist,
tells IranWire that <families of these victims should realize how fortunate they
are that their child survived. Grief must be allowed for the victims who lost an
eye. Until the grieving process is complete, they cannot accept the loss, and
families, friends, and society's support are crucial along the way.> >>
Read more here:
https://iranwire.com/en/blinding-as-a-weapon/114914-blinding-as-a-weapon-28-my-eye-for-a-free-iran-is-his-motto/
Opinion by Gino d'Artali: People of world: Support Ali Zare whatever you can and
doing so the Zan, Zendagi, Azadi movement.
copyright Womens'
Liberation Front 2019/cryfreedom.net 2023