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| Iranian women wearing hijab walk down a street in the capital Tehran in this file picture taken on February 7, 2018 (AFP Photo/ATTA KENARE) |
Tehran (AFP) - A woman who protested against Iran's compulsory hijab law by removing the Islamic veil in public last year has been sentenced to one year in prison, her lawyer said Sunday.
Vida
Movahedi was arrested in October after removing her hijab from her head at
Tehran's Enghelab Square, Payam Derafshan told AFP, confirming his earlier
comments to state news agency IRNA.
Movahedi,
in her mid-20s, was charged with "encouraging corruption and
debauchery" and sentenced by a court in Tehran to one year in prison on
March 2, Derafshan added.
The lawyer
said Movahedi had stated her opposition to the "compulsory hijab" and
that she wanted to express her opinion in "a civil protest".
Movahedi
has staged protests against the law in the past.
In December
2017, she stood on a pillar box on Enghelab Avenue without the mandatory long
coat and raised her white veil on a stick, an act that was copied by women in
different cities.
Enghelab
means revolution in Farsi and the square and avenue are among the busiest areas
in the capital.
Movahedi's
move sparked similar protests by other women, including some at the same spot,
and they soon won recognition as "Dokhtaran-e enghelab", or the Girls
of Revolution Street.
Like other
women who copied her, she was arrested, but she was only fined for her first
protest.
In her
latest case, she has already spent more than five months in prison even though
she is eligible for a pardon and the judge promised he would look favourably on
a request for parole, Derafshan said.
"The
judge was very sympathetic to the fact that Ms. Movahedi has a two-year-old
daughter and that she had not had a political motive for her actions," the
lawyer said.
According
to Derafshan the judge "had urged Movahedi to make a parole request and
that he would grant it as soon as he received it," however bureaucratic
hurdles have prevented Movahedi from sending in her request.
"Movahedi
has repeatedly made the parole requests in writing, but none of them have been
sent," by Gharchak Prison where she is incarcerated.
Movahedi is
also now eligible to be part of a mass pardon, but because the prison
authorities have not yet updated her legal status she cannot receive it,
Derafshan said.
"We
have tried many times to overcome this bureaucratic dilemma but more than a
month later we are nowhere, that's why we've gone to the media," Derafshan
said.

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