Masih Alinejad ? @AlinejadMasih This is #ArezooKhavari, a 16-year-old who took her own life after relentless harassment by her school principal over the Islamic hijab. Her smile, her beautiful hair, and the victory sign in this photo break my heart. She was just a teenage girl who wanted the simple freedom to wear what she liked, to dance, to feel the wind in her hair. But the regime forced her to carry the weight of Islamic dress codes until she chose death over a life of humiliation. This is another kind of killing, a young girl crushed by a system that leaves no room for joy or choice. Recently, Arezoo Badri was shot by the morality police for not wearing hijab and is now paralyzed in a hospital. Another woman at Tehran University took off her clothes after being harassed for resisting, and now she is under the pressure of the regime and accusations of mental instability. These are the horrors we women in Iran live every single day. And when we share our pain, some in the West worry about fueling Islamophobia. Please, don?t look away. Islamic ideology is killing us. Iranian woman are fed up with this gender apartheid regime.
The victim has been named by Iranian news as Arezoo Khavari

A 16-year-old girl took her own life by jumping from a building in Iran after a dispute with school officials for violating the dress code.

Arezoo Khavari is the latest victim of the Islamic Republic’s draconian laws, part of the government’s control over girls’ and women’s lives

An image circulating on X shows her final moments, balancing on the edge of the rooftop of the building in the city of Shahre Ray, in the Tehran province.

Her grieving father said that she had gone on a school trip on Saturday when the assistant principal reprimanded her for her attire, the Iranian Rokna News Agency reported.

It is alleged he received a call from the school, asking, ‘Do you know what your daughter has done? She wore jeans instead of the school uniform pants.’

Arezoo’s father added: ‘Half an hour later, the school principal called again and said she had left the school without permission around 4pm, and they had no information on her whereabouts.’

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School officials called the family again, instructing them to rush to the hospital.

‘I went to the hospital and was confronted with my daughter’s body,’ her father said.

Arezoo had been wearing jeans that day and briefly removed her headscarf while playing with classmates, an act the assistant principal disapproved of.

It is reported that the assistant principal filmed the schoolgirl and threatened to report her to the principal, which could lead to her expulsion.

As an Afghan national, Arezoo already faced challenges in enrolling at school.

A source told IranWire: ‘One of Arezoo’s classmates said that simply for removing her scarf and enjoying herself, she experienced intense stress.’

The family has filed a complaint against the school and the principal. According to her father, this is not the first time his daughter was ‘mistreated’.

He said: ‘This was not the first time they mistreated my daughter. Last year, they tried to deny her enrollment over things like having too many friends or having some hair visible.’

Masih Alinejad, Iranian-American journalist and women’s rights activist, said the responsibility for Arezoo’s death ‘falls squarely on the shoulders of the Islamic Regime in Iran’.

She said in a post on X: ‘The Taliban strip girls of education, and Iran’s clerics crush a girl’s spirit for letting her hair flow in the wind, for dancing, for choosing her own clothes.

‘Arezoo’s voice -like so many others – will be buried beneath the world’s louder headlines.’

Her death comes two years after the ‘Woman, Life, Freedom’ protests engulfed Iran following the killing in custody of 22-year-old Mahsa (Jina) Amini.

Efforts to enforce stringent dress codes for women and girls have intensified since the September 2022 uprising and the Iranian government has only cracked down more on remaining initiatives of women’s activism.

Since April 2024, authorities have only increased repressive measures and policies through the so-called ‘Noor’ Plan (noor meaning ‘light’ in Persian), encouraging, sanctioning and endorsing human rights violations against women and girls who are seen to be flouting the mandatory hijab.

Over the weekend, a university student in Iran was ‘violently’ arrested after stripping down to her underwear ‘in protest’ against the strict dress code for women.

The woman, who has not been named, had her dress torn by Iran’s shadowy vigilante force for ‘not wearing a headscarf’ inside Tehran’s top Islamic Azad University.

Video showed her removing her clothing and walking out onto the street in her underwear after the scuffle with the Basij on Saturday afternoon.

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