France: A prominent Egyptian pop singer who made a song urging people to remove their headscarf said Wednesday that he was willing to pay” a price for independence” after being flogged 74 days by the regulators as part of his word.
Mehdi Yarrahi, arrested in 2023, was released last year after being convicted for his music in support of the” Lady. Living. Flexibility” protests that erupted in 2022 and rocked Iran’s administrative management.
” Today, the last part of the ruling issued by the Revolutionary Court– 74 lashes– was fully and completely implemented at tree 4 of the company for police of judgements of the Tehran social security prosecutor”, his lawyer Zahra Minouei wrote on X.
” The case was closed”, she added.
In a hostile following article, Yarrahi added:” The person who is never willing to pay a price for flexibility, is not capable of freedom”.
Yarrahi was arrested in August 2023 for releasing what the authorities termed an “illegal song”, namely the track” Roosarito” (” Your Headscarf” in Persian ) and voiced support for women’s right to remove the garment that must be worn in public in the Islamic republic.
The execution of his word sparked outcry among supporters.
Taraneh Alidoosti, an artist who was arrested during the opposition movement after she posed without the robe, said on Instagram in response to the thrashing:” Shame on barbarism, sorrow on abuse, shame on violence, shame on anti-human laws, and shame and disgrace on our helplessness”.
Nobel peace prize laureate Narges Mohammadi, on temporary release from a prison sentence, said in a statement the flogging was “retaliation” for Yarrahi’s support of women in Iran.
” The lashes on Mehdi’s body are a whip against the proud and resilient women of Iran and the thriving, powerful spirit of the” Woman. Life. Freedom. “movement, she said.
Iran’s sharia law provides for flogging sentences that are frequently handed out by judges, though far from always implemented.
Yarrahi’s 2022 song” Soroode Zan” ( Woman’s Anthem ) also became a protest anthem, especially at universities.
The death in custody on September 16, 2022 of Mahsa Amini, a 22-year-old Iranian Kurd arrested for allegedly violating Iran’s strict dress rules for women, sparked months of protests that included calls for an end to Iran’s Islamic regime.
The protests have now largely been quashed despite occasional outbursts after a crackdown that saw thousands detained, according to the United Nations, and hundreds shot dead by security forces, according to activists.
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