CRY FREEDOM.net
formerly known as
Women's 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  babout the 21th. century feminist revolution as well especially the Zan, Zendegi, Azadi uprising in Iran and the and the uprisings of our sisters in other parts of the Middle-east. This online magazine that started December 2019 is published every week. Thank you for your time and interest.
Gino d'Artali
indept investigative journalist
radical feminist and women's rights activist 
 


You are now at the Iran 'Woman, Life, Freedom'  section
For the 'Women's Arab Spring 1.2' Revolt news click here  Updated August 28, 2024  

SPECIAL REPORTS PALESTINE

Click here for actual updates  Updated August 29, 2024

 

HOME

ABOUT

CONTACT


JINA MAHSA AMINI
The face of Iran's protests. Her life, her dreams and her death.

In memory of Jina 'Mahsa' Amini, the cornerstone of the 'Zan. Zendegi. Azadi revolution.
16 February 2023 | By Gino d'Artali

And also
Read all about the assasination of the 22 year young Jina Mahsa Amini (Kurdistan-Iran) and the start of the Zan, Zendegi, Azadi (Women, life, freedom) revolution in Iran  2022-'24
and the latest news about the 'Women Live Freedom' Revolution per month in
2024: Sept wk1 P2 -- Sept wk1 -- August wk4 P2 -- August wk4 -- August WK3 P3 -- August wk3 P2 -- August wk3 -- overview per month
and 2023: Dec wk 5 part 2 -- Dec wk 5 -- Dec week 4-3 -- Dec wk3 -- Dec 17 - 10 -- Dec week 2 and 1 -- click here for a menu overview November - Januari 2023


Tribute to KIAN PIRFALA, 9 years old and victim of the Islamic Republic's savagery 10 years ago. Update December 25, 2023

Editorial by G. d'A.: Dear reader, as a webmaster also I constantly have to guard the read-ability of the 'Cryfreedom'-outlet and sometimes decisions need to be made to have it be for your convenience and moreso in total support of the women-led revolt in Iran which inevitably will be a grand Victory. Still, choices must be made always and so I've decided to, for now, embed all the actual news about the 'NO-hijab; 'Biological terror attscks against schoolgirls'; 'Iranian journalists under siege'; 'Blinding as a weapon' and 'The hanging spree' as part of the 'Actual news' updates of the Iran 'Woman, Life, Freedom' section. But, if need be and urgent attention and action is needed concerning the above mentioned topics it will get an extra emphasized place as part of the actual news page-layout. Thank you for being a reader and for your support of the 'Woman, Life, Freedom' revolution.
Click here for the previously tabled topics

CLICK HERE ON HOW TO READ ALL ON THIS PAGE 

Here we are to enter THE IRANIAN WOMEN'S REVOLUTIONISTS against
the supreme leader, the arch-reactionary Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, and his placeman president, Ebrahim Raisi. The message of the women when he visited a university is plain: <give way or get lost> in 2023.
IN MEMORY OF ASRA PANAHI (16)- JHINA MAHSA AMINI (22) - NIKA SHAKARAMI (16), SARINA ESMAILZADEH (16) HADIS NAJAFI (20), AND MORE WOMEN WHO WERE ASSASINATED SO FAR BY THE IRANIAN AXIS OF EVIL.
  Click here for a total list so far

'Facing Faces and Facts 1-2'  (2022) to commemorate the above named and more and food for thought and inspiration to fight on.
and 'Facing Faces & Facts 3' edited December 2022/March 2023

Dear reader, from here on the 'Woman, Life, Freedom' pages menu will look a bit different and this to avoid too many pop-ups ,meaning the underlined period  in yellow tells you in what period you are and click on another underlinded period to go there. However, when needed a certain topic will be in yellow meaning it's a link to go that topic and will open in a new window. If you dissagree about any change feel more than free to let me know what you think at info@cryfreedom.net
This does not count for the  above topics which, when clicked on, will still appear in a pop-up window and for now the 'old' lay-out 'till I worked that all out. Thank you. Gino d'Artali
(Updates August 30, 2024)

December 31, 2023 - Preface about the below 3 heroines of Iran by Gino d'Artali : Beacons of hope and inspiration on the road towards a long and free Iran . * Jina Amini, our sister/daughter who martyred herself for freedom; *Narges Mohammadi, our sister and as I call her 'mother of a free Iran' and winner of the Nobel Prize of Freedom 2023 and sentenced five times to a total of 31 years in prison and 154 lashes but who refuses to give in to the mullahs' regime to wear a hijab or bow to their demands and therefore is refused medical care although needing it badly and bringing her live in danger but says "Victory is not easy, but it is certain"  * and Maryam Akbari Monfared, our sister who's encarcerated since 15 years and refuses to bow down to the mullahs saying "Finally, one day, I will sing the song of victory from the summit of the mountain, like the sun. Tomorrow belongs to us"
Read all about them here and let them inspire you on your road towards a long and free Iran or as we say in the West: 'Three strikes and the mullahs' regime is out'
Be the finalizing strike dear and brave dissent
 
z



UPDATES OF THE UPRISING  AND REVOLUTION AROUND THE ONE-YEAR ANNIVERSARY OF THE DEATH OF JINA AMINI IN CUSTODY OF THE REGIME'S ATTEMPT AND CRUELTY TO TRY AND CRUSH IT.

Articles about JINA
March 4 - February 27, 2024:
<<Iranian Teacher Arrested for <Illegal Gathering> at Mahsa Amini's Grave...
and more news

February 12 , 2024:
<<Unlawfully Imprisoned Activist and Organizer of Mahsa Jina Amini's Funeral Must Be Released on Medical Grounds
<<Mahsa Amini's Father: <Everything They Have Said and Shown is Lies>
and
WHO JINA AMINI REALLY WAS.
By Diako Alavi, a journalist from Saqqez and family friend of Mahsa Amini 
and
Jina Amini, the face of Irans uprising and revolution:
www.cryfreedom.net/the-face-of-irans-protests.htm

Click here for more articles





















We all grief for the loss of our sister / daughter of Iran Armita Gevarnand:
 


Read her story here

AND

Updates of Jina Aminis' Revolution:
Part 16: December 28 - 16, 2023

Part 17: January 23 - 6, 2024
Part 18: March 4 - February 8, 2024
   

and links to earlier parts
 
Gino d'artali's opinion: We mourn AND fight!

And read also

ONGOING 'TILL VICTORY:
Jan 2024: 'WOMAN, LIFE, FREEDOM'
REVOLUTION

 

 

 

 

A to VICTORY tribute to
NARGES MOHAMMADI
August 9, 2024
"My heart cries...
(For Narges Mohammadi and all suffering but fighting back mothers/women)

Update August 5, 2024
"You are obligated to hold a public trial with the presence of independent journalists, women's rights activists, human rights advocates, and my lawyers. I wish to be prosecuted in court with the testimony of witnesses of the sexual assaults committed by the Islamic Republic regime against women,"
and
Narges-Mohammadi-Denied-Urgent-Medical-Treatment

and earlier heroic stories
May 6, 2024
"Tyranny will fall"

"Victory is not easy, but it is certain"
watch it here : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8LAMPz57Aqw 

Click here for a news-overview from January 15, 2024 'till October 31, 2023

 

 

 

 



JINA AMINI'S VOICE IS ALSO HEARD
And do read also the above linked  incredible December 2023 update!

despite the mullahs' regime to force it down!
Her mother speaks out loud and clear

Click here for the latest news of the
'Woman, Life, Freedom'
revolution


 


 

 

 

 

 

 

 






July 23 - 22, 2024
Read here her full story:
PAKSHAN AZIZI, "Denying the Truth, and Its Alternative"

and more in actual news below

MARJAM AKBARI MONFARED

June 24, 2024: The Iranian Regime Judiciary Launches a New Case to Seize the Assets of Maryam Akbari Monfared and Her Family, in Revenge for Seeking Justice for Her Siblings Executed in the 1980s
Dec 30, 2023: Not bowing for the mullahs' regime she says:
"Finally, one day, I will sing the song of victory from the summit of the mountain, like the sun. Tomorrow belongs to us"

 

 

 

 



 




27 August 2024
Kurdish Political Prisoner, Varisheh Moradi

 Stays in Abeyance in Evin Prison Amid Continued Deprivation of Visitation and Phone Call Rights
 


August 14, 2024
Fatemeh Amini, symbol of perseverance and steadfastness

   
Click here for more stories of Heroines of Iran 

June 19, 2024
Neda Agha Sultan Face of the 2009 uprising in Iran

 

Please do read the following articles about heroines who risk live and limb for the women-led revolution and no matter what they'll never give in nor up!and other stories: click on the underlined topics:
August 29, 2024: Victims of Forced Disappearances
August 28, 2024: Nurses' Strikes Escalate Across Iran as Authorities Intensify Repression
 August 28, 2024: When family betrays
August 27, 2024: A Filmmaker's Fight
August 23, 2024: Violation of the Rights of Female Detainees
August 22, 2024: Demands Immediate Release of Iranian Lawyer

and 
Click here for previous inspiring stories and  articles incl. Red Alerts  

Read here more about the
Nurses' demands - "A nurse will die, but will not accept humiliation,":

SPECIAL REPORTS PALESTINE

Click here for actual updates  Updated August 29, 2024

'The mullahs' regime / OHCHR* gallows' dance'

July 8 - 4, 2024: The-death-sentence-against-Sharifeh-Mohammadi
June 15, 2024: Prisoner Swap with Iran is Shameful Reward
June 5 - May 23, 2024: It |Iran| puts people to death in order to terrorize the population into silence.
and other stories 

*OHCHR - UN Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights

Click here for earlier reports
 

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.


Nurses strikes escalete
Center for Human Rights in Iran - August 28 2024
Nurses' Strikes Escalate Across Iran as Authorities Intensify Repression
Peaceful Protests for Fair Wages and Improved Working Conditions Met with Arbitrary Arrests
As nurses' strikes surge across Iran, the Center for Human Rights in Iran (CHRI) demands that authorities respect the rights of these essential healthcare workers to peacefully protest and immediately cease violent crackdowns.
"For years, Iran's predominantly female nursing workforce has been systematically exploited and silenced," said Hadi Ghaemi, executive director of CHRI. "Without the freedom to form independent unions, these workers face severe government retaliation for simply demanding what is rightfully theirs-fair wages and safe working conditions," he added. "The international community cannot remain silent," said Ghaemi. "It must hold the authorities accountable for their blatant violations of the right to peaceful protest and stand in solidarity with Iran's healthcare workers." The protests erupted following the death of Parvaneh Mandani, a 32-year-old nurse from Fars Province, on August 2. Believed to have died from overwork, Mandani’s death has become a rallying cry for nurses across the country.
Nurses Refusing to Back Down Despite Violent Repression
"Many nurses and medical staff had gathered at the [name of hospital withheld] to protest and chant slogans when suddenly some plainclothes individuals from an unknown organization attacked and violently dispersed the nurses," a medical worker who joined a protest in Mashhad, Iran's second largest city, on August 17, told CHRI. "The protesting nurses stood in front of the attackers and prevented the confrontation from escalating," she said on condition of anonymity. "The hospital officials addressed the nurses in a threatening tone, saying that if they continued to protest and strike, all the contract nurses and staff would be fired. The intensity of the protests has decreased in Mashhad's big hospitals, as officials have dissuaded some nurses and medical staff members from protesting by making promises, but everyone knows that if the crisis continues, the protests will resume," she added.
Nurses Protest Harsh Working Conditions and Inadequate Pay
Nurses in Iran are subjected to grueling working conditions, including excessive hours and inadequate staffing, which, coupled with low wages and lack of adequate support from the government, contribute to immense physical and mental strain. Some overworked nurses have reportedly died by suicide as a result.
The protests began in the city of Karaj, in Alborz province, west of Tehran, and have quickly spread across the country.
As of August 27, strikes and demonstrations have been reported in major cities including Tehran, Karaj, Shiraz, Mashhad, Tabriz, Isfahan, Rasht, Yazd, Kermanshah, Ahvaz, Arak, Bandar Abbas, Nishapur, Bushehr, Gorgan, Ilam, Marivan, and Dehdasht.
Violent Repression
On August 27, videos surfaced online showing Islamic Republic police repressing the ongoing peaceful protests. In Bushehr, police violently dispersed emergency medical response workers who had joined nurses at a protest demanding higher wages. A strong police presence was also reported at demonstrations in Tehran.
Nurses chanted slogans including, "Enough promises, we don't have any food," "Nurses, shout for your rights," and "Don't be afraid, we are all in this together!"
The exact number of arbitrary arrests remains elusive. The victims include Pouya Esfandiari, a Kurdish nurse from Divandareh, Kurdistan Province, working at the Milad Hospital in Tehran, who was arrested by Iranian security forces on August 20 and taken to an undisclosed location, according to the Hengaw human rights organization. Zahra Tamandon, a head nurse at Masih Daneshvari Hospital in Tehran, was taken into custody on August 21, along with several other nurses whose identities remain unconfirmed. Tamandon was released three days later. Two nurses were detained in Arak on August 24, and another was arrested in Isfahan on August 26.
No additional details about these cases have been released.
Nurses Demand Fair Wages and Better Working Conditions
Nurses across Iran have made a series of critical demands in their ongoing strikes, highlighting the urgent need for systemic reforms in the healthcare sector. Among their most consequential demands is an increase in salaries to at least 30 million tomans (approximately $505 USD), aligning with the inflation rate, and for their official minimum income to be above the poverty line. Nurses are also demanding the proper enforcement of regulations governing nursing services and the removal of responsibilities that go beyond their job descriptions. Additionally, they insist that overtime work be voluntary, limited to 80 hours per month, and that the current overtime pay-currently less than 25,000 tomans (less than 50 cents) per hour-be significantly increased. Furthermore, they are advocating for the rehiring of nurses who were unjustly dismissed following the COVID-19 epidemic.
"These demands reflect the nurses' broader struggle for fair wages, better working conditions, and a healthcare system that truly supports both its workers and the patients they serve," said Ghaemi.
Iranian Labor Groups Stand in Solidarity with Nurses
In a statement of solidarity, the Coordinating Council of the Iranian Teachers Trade Associations expressed support: "We hope our dear nurses will reach their demands through unity and collective activism… What unites us, Iranian educators, with you, the nurses of the country, is a common pain. Consider us your sympathizers." The Labor Union Organization Assistance Coordination Committee, the Khuzestan Province Pensioners Alliance, and the Haft Tappeh sugar plant workers are among other domestic labor groups that have expressed support for the protesting nurses. The three groups issued a joint statement on August 26, stating, "Workers, teachers, and pensioners have been struggling to realize many of the same demands as nurses concerning cost of living, wages and welfare benefits. Until the conditions and salary terms of these hardworking people are improved, the health system, which has already been commercialized, will cause more and more people to face the abyss of death and destruction," they said.
Iran's Violations of its Domestic and International Obligations
Despite the Islamic Republic's Constitution guaranteeing the right to form "professional associations," neither it nor the Labor Law recognizes the right to strike by refusing to work or to form independent unions. Iran's government does not recognize independent unions, imprisons their leaders under sham national security charges, and routinely arrests individuals peacefully protesting labor conditions-all practices that violate the International Labor Organization’s (ILO) Fundamental Principles, to which Iran is a signatory. Although Iran became a founding member of the ILO in 1919, it has not ratified all the ILO's core conventions, particularly those related to the right to form independent unions and collective bargaining. These include:
ILO Convention No. 87, Freedom of Association and Protection of the Right to Organize Convention, which guarantees workers' rights to form and join trade unions of their choice without interference from authorities.
ILO Convention No. 98, Right to Organize and Collective Bargaining Convention, which protects workers' rights to organize and engage in collective bargaining with employers.
The Islamic Republic is also in severe violation of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) and the International Covenant on Economic, Social, and Cultural Rights (ICESCR), both of which protect the rights to protest and form independent unions.
The Nursing Tariffs Law, which mandates that nurses' pay be determined by workload and performance, has remained unimplemented since its passage in 2006.
Similarly, the Civil Service Management Law allocates state resources for bonuses to workers performing under special conditions, such as during epidemics or in extreme climates. Despite nurses’ demands for this provision to be enforced during the COVID-19 pandemic, authorities ignored their requests. Key provisions of the 2009 Productivity Promotion Law, which requires the government to maintain adequate staffing levels in the health system, have also gone unimplemented. The Ministry of Health has not hired new personnel for years, leaving public hospitals critically understaffed and nurses overwhelmed. "Despite being bound by both domestic laws and international conventions to protect workers’ rights, the Islamic Republic has repeatedly violated these obligations in practice," said Ghaemi. "This relentless suppression is driven by decades of impunity and the international community's failure to hold Iran accountable for its widespread human rights abuses," he added.
Source:
https://iranhumanrights.org/2024/08/nurses-strikes-escalate-across-iran-as-authorities-intensify-repression/


 
Zahra Tamaddon
NCRI - Womens committee - 22 August 2024 - in Women's News
<<Zahra Tamaddon Arrested Amid Widespread Protests by Iranian Nurses and Healthcare Workers
In late August 2024, amid escalating protests by nurses and healthcare workers across Iran, the Iranian regime’s security forces arrested Zahra Tamaddon, the head nurse at Masih Daneshvari Hospital in Tehran. Zahra Tamaddon's arrest is part of a broader crackdown on healthcare professionals who have been actively participating in protests demanding better working conditions and wages. On Tuesday, August 20, 2024, Zahra Tamaddon, the head nurse at Masih Daneshvari Hospital in Tehran, was arrested by intelligence agents. Although the identities of the arresting officers and the location where she is being held remain unknown, it is believed that her arrest was prompted by her participation in protests and her encouragement of hospital staff to go on strike. Tamaddon's colleagues at Masih Daneshvari Hospital have stated that they will initiate a strike if she is not released promptly. Additionally, reports indicate that four other healthcare workers have been detained, though their identities have not yet been disclosed.
Ongoing Protests and the Healthcare Workers' Demands
The protests and strikes by nurses and healthcare workers are spreading across at least 20 cities in Iran, including Mashhad (northeastern Iran), Tabriz (northwestern Iran), Ahvaz (southwestern Iran), Rasht (northern Iran), Kermanshah (western Iran), Isfahan (central Iran), Dehdasht (southwestern Iran), Jahrom (southern Iran), Abadan (southwestern Iran), and Marivan (western Iran). These protests are driven by deteriorating working conditions, unbearable workloads, and the systematic violation of their rights.
Nurses are subjected to compulsory overtime, grueling 12-hour shifts, and meager wages, leaving many unable to meet even their basic living expenses. The regime has also failed to implement agreed-upon service tariffs and contracts, further fueling discontent. As a result, the emigration of nurses from Iran has accelerated in recent months, with an estimated 150 to 200 nurses leaving the country each month searching for better opportunities abroad. During the protests, nurses have been vocal in their demands, chanting slogans such as "A nurse will die, but will not accept humiliation," "Only in the streets will our rights be won," "Expenses in dollars, our wages in rials," "Our power is in our unity, the result of our hard work,” “Nurses, shout and demand your rights," "We've heard enough promises, our tables are empty," and "From Shiraz to Mashhad, strike, strike."
The arrest of Zahra Tamaddon and other healthcare workers highlights the growing unrest among Iran’s medical community, who are demanding an end to oppressive working conditions and the enforcement of their rights. The regime's response to these peaceful protests has been heavy-handed, as seen in the arrests of healthcare workers. The situation remains tense as healthcare professionals across Iran continue their struggle for justice, fair treatment, and the basic right to a livable wage.>>
Source:
https://women.ncr-iran.org/2024/08/22/zahra-tamaddon/

Hengaw Organisation for Human Right - 24 August 2024
<<Pouya Esfandiari, a Kurdish Nurse at Milad Hospital in Tehran, Arrested, and His Fate Remains Unknown
Pouya Esfandiari, a Kurdish nurse from Divandarreh, Kurdistan Province working at Milad Hospital in Tehran, was arrested by Iranian security forces five days ago and transferred to an undisclosed location. Since then, no information has been made available regarding his whereabouts. According to a report received by the Hengaw Human Organization for Human Rights, on Tuesday, August 20, 2024, Pouya Esfandiari, a 31-year-old Kurdish nurse from Divandarreh, was arrested by Iranian Intelligence forces and transferred to an undisclosed location. He has been denied the right to communicate via phone or meet with his family. Sources indicate that Pouya Esfandiari was arrested due to his participation in protests and strikes by nurses that have been taking place in hospitals across various cities in recent days. Efforts by his family and relatives to obtain information about his fate have so far been unsuccessful. To date, there is no accurate information available regarding the reasons for his arrest, the charges against him, his place of detention, or his current condition.>>
Source:
https://hengaw.net/en/news/2024/08/article-95

NCRI - Womens committee - 22 August 2024 - in Women's News
<<Zahra Tamaddon Arrested Amid Widespread Protests by Iranian Nurses and Healthcare Workers
In late August 2024, amid escalating protests by nurses and healthcare workers across Iran, the Iranian regime’s security forces arrested Zahra Tamaddon, the head nurse at Masih Daneshvari Hospital in Tehran. Zahra Tamaddon's arrest is part of a broader crackdown on healthcare professionals who have been actively participating in protests demanding better working conditions and wages. On Tuesday, August 20, 2024, Zahra Tamaddon, the head nurse at Masih Daneshvari Hospital in Tehran, was arrested by intelligence agents. Although the identities of the arresting officers and the location where she is being held remain unknown, it is believed that her arrest was prompted by her participation in protests and her encouragement of hospital staff to go on strike. Tamaddon's colleagues at Masih Daneshvari Hospital have stated that they will initiate a strike if she is not released promptly. Additionally, reports indicate that four other healthcare workers have been detained, though their identities have not yet been disclosed.
Ongoing Protests and the Healthcare Workers' Demands
The protests and strikes by nurses and healthcare workers are spreading across at least 20 cities in Iran, including Mashhad (northeastern Iran), Tabriz (northwestern Iran), Ahvaz (southwestern Iran), Rasht (northern Iran), Kermanshah (western Iran), Isfahan (central Iran), Dehdasht (southwestern Iran), Jahrom (southern Iran), Abadan (southwestern Iran), and Marivan (western Iran). These protests are driven by deteriorating working conditions, unbearable workloads, and the systematic violation of their rights.
Nurses are subjected to compulsory overtime, grueling 12-hour shifts, and meager wages, leaving many unable to meet even their basic living expenses. The regime has also failed to implement agreed-upon service tariffs and contracts, further fueling discontent. As a result, the emigration of nurses from Iran has accelerated in recent months, with an estimated 150 to 200 nurses leaving the country each month searching for better opportunities abroad. During the protests, nurses have been vocal in their demands, chanting slogans such as "A nurse will die, but will not accept humiliation," "Only in the streets will our rights be won," "Expenses in dollars, our wages in rials," "Our power is in our unity, the result of our hard work,” “Nurses, shout and demand your rights," "We've heard enough promises, our tables are empty," and "From Shiraz to Mashhad, strike, strike."
The arrest of Zahra Tamaddon and other healthcare workers highlights the growing unrest among Iran’s medical community, who are demanding an end to oppressive working conditions and the enforcement of their rights. The regime's response to these peaceful protests has been heavy-handed, as seen in the arrests of healthcare workers. The situation remains tense as healthcare professionals across Iran continue their struggle for justice, fair treatment, and the basic right to a livable wage.>>
Source:
https://women.ncr-iran.org/2024/08/22/zahra-tamaddon/


Pouya Esfandiari
Hengaw Organisation for Human Right - 24 August 2024
<<Pouya Esfandiari, a Kurdish Nurse at Milad Hospital in Tehran, Arrested, and His Fate Remains Unknown
Pouya Esfandiari, a Kurdish nurse from Divandarreh, Kurdistan Province working at Milad Hospital in Tehran, was arrested by Iranian security forces five days ago and transferred to an undisclosed location. Since then, no information has been made available regarding his whereabouts. According to a report received by the Hengaw Human Organization for Human Rights, on Tuesday, August 20, 2024, Pouya Esfandiari, a 31-year-old Kurdish nurse from Divandarreh, was arrested by Iranian Intelligence forces and transferred to an undisclosed location. He has been denied the right to communicate via phone or meet with his family. Sources indicate that Pouya Esfandiari was arrested due to his participation in protests and strikes by nurses that have been taking place in hospitals across various cities in recent days. Efforts by his family and relatives to obtain information about his fate have so far been unsuccessful. To date, there is no accurate information available regarding the reasons for his arrest, the charges against him, his place of detention, or his current condition.>>
Source:
https://hengaw.net/en/news/2024/08/article-95

Women's
Liberation Front 2019/cryfreedom.net 2024