Iran Opens 'Mental Health' Clinic for Women Who Flout Hijab Law

Vinson

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Nov 24, 2023
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I'm sure the therapy at the clinic is beating the shit out of them or killing them


An Iranian state Islamic body announced plans on Tuesday for a new Tehran clinic to treat women flouting mandatory headscarves, in the latest example of authorities treating opponents of the rule as mentally ill.

Iran’s first counseling clinic explicitly dedicated to promoting mandatory hijab laws will provide "scientific and psychological treatment for hijab removal," said Mehri Talebi Darestani, the woman due to oversee the facility.

“The establishment of this center will be for the scientific and psychological treatment of removing the hijab, specifically for the teenage generation, young adults, and women seeking social and Islamic identity and visiting this center is optional," she added.

The wording of the clinic's mission statement closely resembles that of substance abuse facilities. Prominent activists and human rights advocates have condemned official attempts to pathologize opposition to the hijab.

A university student who stripped in apparent protest at harsh treatment by dress code enforcers was detained and sent for mental health treatment, officials said this month. Authorities have frequently described as insane proponents of the country’s Woman, Life, Freedom anti-hijab movement, which was sparked by the September 2022 death of Mahsa Amini while in the custody of morality police.

A controversial leader at the helm

Darestani's office is part of Iran's Headquarters for Promotion of Virtue and Prevention of Vice, the body is responsible for defining and enforcing strict religious standards in society, particularly women's dress.

It is led by a man, Mohammed Saleh Hashemi Golpayegani, a direct appointee of appointed by Iranian Supreme Leader, Ali Khamenei.

Talebi Darestani said that the clinic responds to visits by women and families pressured into non-compliance with hijab laws, adding that the project aligns with a roadmap for promoting “dignity, modesty, chastity, and hijab.”

A focus of controversy in the past, Talebi Darastani has supported and promoted child marriage on state television.

Previously the head of the Ministry of Labor's Inspection Center, she was dismissed from that post in 2023 under unclear circumstances, fueling debate over her recent appointment to her new hijab enforcement role.

Responses and growing tensions over hijab enforcement

Recent public reactions to the clinic show persistent tensions surrounding hijab enforcement. A widely publicized incident last month at the Islamic Azad University’s in Tehran brought the issue back into the global spotlight.

In protest against enforcement measures on campus, a female student named Ahoo Daryaei, removed her clothing in defiance of security staff intervening over her hijab.

Daryaei was transferred to a psychological center shortly after her arrest, drawing accusations from activists that the government is attempting to undermine her protest by portraying her actions as mentally aberrant.

This practice of publicly gaslighting protestors has been seen by critics as a deliberate strategy to delegitimize dissent.

Iranian authorities have increasingly utilized mental health institutions to manage dissent, a method condemned by human rights advocates as psychologically abusive and manipulative.

Following the 2022 protests, artists who posted images of themselves without a hijab, including actresses like Afsaneh Bayegan, Azadeh Samadi, and Leila Bolukat, received court-ordered mandates for weekly visits to psychological centers for mental health certificates in response to their conduct.


The ethical debate over state involvement in psychiatry

Iran’s psychiatric and psychological community has responded critically to the state’s perceived manipulation of mental health diagnoses to silence opposition.

In 2023, four Iranian psychiatric associations issued a joint statement condemning the government’s use of non-scientific diagnoses such as anti-family personality disorder as a pretext for punishing hijab protestors.

The statement decried the practice as a violation of professional ethics, highlighting specific principles from Iran’s Professional Ethics Charter for Psychiatry, which has been in place since 2015.

This charter explicitly prohibits psychiatric professionals from engaging in discriminatory actions against individuals based on religious, ethnic, or gender identities.

Clause six of the charter warns against discrimination, while clause seven emphasizes the importance of shielding mental health practice from unqualified or politically motivated interventions.

A shift in leadership without policy reform

Despite President Masoud Pezeshkian’s assurances during his campaign to ease the hijab mandate, programs like the Clinic for Quitting Hijab Removal may reflect an inability to challenge conservative factions and enact promised reforms.

The persistence of hijab enforcement measures under Pezeshkian’s administration has sparked questions regarding his influence over Iran’s religious institutions and highlights the struggle to balance public sentiment with ideological mandates.

With mounting international scrutiny and domestic resistance, the efforts to reframe and manage public dissent through psychiatry are likely to fuel further controversy over Iran’s approach to human rights and individual freedoms.

 

Leimonis

Well-known member
Feb 28, 2020
9,647
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I'm sure the therapy at the clinic is beating the shit out of them or killing them


An Iranian state Islamic body announced plans on Tuesday for a new Tehran clinic to treat women flouting mandatory headscarves, in the latest example of authorities treating opponents of the rule as mentally ill.

Iran’s first counseling clinic explicitly dedicated to promoting mandatory hijab laws will provide "scientific and psychological treatment for hijab removal," said Mehri Talebi Darestani, the woman due to oversee the facility.

“The establishment of this center will be for the scientific and psychological treatment of removing the hijab, specifically for the teenage generation, young adults, and women seeking social and Islamic identity and visiting this center is optional," she added.

The wording of the clinic's mission statement closely resembles that of substance abuse facilities. Prominent activists and human rights advocates have condemned official attempts to pathologize opposition to the hijab.

A university student who stripped in apparent protest at harsh treatment by dress code enforcers was detained and sent for mental health treatment, officials said this month. Authorities have frequently described as insane proponents of the country’s Woman, Life, Freedom anti-hijab movement, which was sparked by the September 2022 death of Mahsa Amini while in the custody of morality police.

A controversial leader at the helm

Darestani's office is part of Iran's Headquarters for Promotion of Virtue and Prevention of Vice, the body is responsible for defining and enforcing strict religious standards in society, particularly women's dress.

It is led by a man, Mohammed Saleh Hashemi Golpayegani, a direct appointee of appointed by Iranian Supreme Leader, Ali Khamenei.

Talebi Darestani said that the clinic responds to visits by women and families pressured into non-compliance with hijab laws, adding that the project aligns with a roadmap for promoting “dignity, modesty, chastity, and hijab.”

A focus of controversy in the past, Talebi Darastani has supported and promoted child marriage on state television.

Previously the head of the Ministry of Labor's Inspection Center, she was dismissed from that post in 2023 under unclear circumstances, fueling debate over her recent appointment to her new hijab enforcement role.

Responses and growing tensions over hijab enforcement

Recent public reactions to the clinic show persistent tensions surrounding hijab enforcement. A widely publicized incident last month at the Islamic Azad University’s in Tehran brought the issue back into the global spotlight.

In protest against enforcement measures on campus, a female student named Ahoo Daryaei, removed her clothing in defiance of security staff intervening over her hijab.

Daryaei was transferred to a psychological center shortly after her arrest, drawing accusations from activists that the government is attempting to undermine her protest by portraying her actions as mentally aberrant.

This practice of publicly gaslighting protestors has been seen by critics as a deliberate strategy to delegitimize dissent.

Iranian authorities have increasingly utilized mental health institutions to manage dissent, a method condemned by human rights advocates as psychologically abusive and manipulative.

Following the 2022 protests, artists who posted images of themselves without a hijab, including actresses like Afsaneh Bayegan, Azadeh Samadi, and Leila Bolukat, received court-ordered mandates for weekly visits to psychological centers for mental health certificates in response to their conduct.


The ethical debate over state involvement in psychiatry

Iran’s psychiatric and psychological community has responded critically to the state’s perceived manipulation of mental health diagnoses to silence opposition.

In 2023, four Iranian psychiatric associations issued a joint statement condemning the government’s use of non-scientific diagnoses such as anti-family personality disorder as a pretext for punishing hijab protestors.

The statement decried the practice as a violation of professional ethics, highlighting specific principles from Iran’s Professional Ethics Charter for Psychiatry, which has been in place since 2015.

This charter explicitly prohibits psychiatric professionals from engaging in discriminatory actions against individuals based on religious, ethnic, or gender identities.

Clause six of the charter warns against discrimination, while clause seven emphasizes the importance of shielding mental health practice from unqualified or politically motivated interventions.

A shift in leadership without policy reform

Despite President Masoud Pezeshkian’s assurances during his campaign to ease the hijab mandate, programs like the Clinic for Quitting Hijab Removal may reflect an inability to challenge conservative factions and enact promised reforms.

The persistence of hijab enforcement measures under Pezeshkian’s administration has sparked questions regarding his influence over Iran’s religious institutions and highlights the struggle to balance public sentiment with ideological mandates.

With mounting international scrutiny and domestic resistance, the efforts to reframe and manage public dissent through psychiatry are likely to fuel further controversy over Iran’s approach to human rights and individual freedoms.

Another Zionist attempt to slander noble Iranian authorities and to discredit Iran in an attempt to promote dying American hegemony!
 
  • Haha
Reactions: Vinson

Vinson

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Another Zionist attempt to slander noble Iranian authorities and to discredit Iran in an attempt to promote dying American hegemony!
That's right, that's how Terb's terrorist supporters see it. 🤣
 

richaceg

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I bet you they have 100% efficiency...I'm going to go out on a limb and say...there won't be a single woman coming out of that facility not wearing the full gear.
 

Vinson

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Nov 24, 2023
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For Islamfascist Iranian dictators, terrorism is more important then their own people. Just like other Muslim countries.

Blinded Iranian Protesters Chastise the Regime for Prioritizing Hezbollah Members


Iran’s Foreign Minister has faced intense backlash from Iranian protesters who were shot in the eyes during the 2022 protests, following his comments about the Islamic Republic providing immediate treatment to Hezbollah fighters injured in Lebanon.

Speaking on Tuesday, Abbas Araghchi said that after pager explosions injured the eyes of Hezbollah fighters, Iran sent 15 ophthalmic surgeons overnight to Lebanon to treat the victims.

He said that many of the fighters’ eyes have been treated, and they are expected to regain their sight.

Araghchi’s remarks sparked reactions from some victims of the crackdown on the Woman, Life, Freedom protest movement in Iran, who have been denied the right to proper medical treatment for their eye injuries.

These protesters faced security measures, with some being arrested and others detained under conditions that prevented them from receiving adequate care. Fearing arrest, some even avoided seeking treatment at hospitals.

This disparity in treatment has caused additional suffering for Iranian eye injury victims, who have expressed anguish.

The Woman, Life, Freedom protests in Iran, sparked by the death in custody of Mahsa Amini in the summer of 2022, lasted for months.

During these protests, the Islamic Republic killed at least 500 protesters, blinded at least 580 by shooting at one or both of their eyes and executed at least nine protesters.

Thousands of protesters, activists, and journalists were also imprisoned, tortured, and subjected to sexual violence during the movement.

In contrast to the collective memory of the 2022 protests, Abbas Araghchi, speaking on a state-run media outlet, openly stated that the Islamic Republic’s efforts to treat the eye injuries of Hezbollah members in Lebanon had been effective.

“We sent the surgeons by plane to Lebanon. The plane brought over 100 eye-injured people to Iran, where they were treated in Tehran hospitals, and treatment began immediately,” Araghchi said.

He also noted that former Health Minister and ophthalmologist Hassan Qazizadeh Hashemi played a key role in treating the Hezbollah fighters and had personally operated on the Iranian ambassador in Lebanon.

‘What’s the Difference Between Me, an Iranian, and the Lebanese?’

Yahya Sorkhani, a civil activist, former political prisoner, and eye injury victim of the Woman, Life, Freedom movement, responded to Araghchi’s remarks.

He pointed out the lack of timely medical treatment for the victims of the crackdown on protests and the security measures in hospitals at the time, saying, “When a protest takes place in Iran, hospitals, clinics, and even medical offices are controlled and prevent injured protesters from being treated.

"Even nurses and doctors are arrested. But today, Mr. Araghchi shamelessly says that they treated 100 Hezbollah members with eye injuries with the best Iranian doctors.”

Addressing Abbas Araghchi directly, he said: “Mr. Araghchi, what’s the difference between me, an Iranian, and my fellow countrymen who were injured by your own colleagues, and the eye-injured Lebanese? Why do you arrest me, yet send private planes to treat them?”

‘I Will Never Forgive You’

Mersedeh Shahinkar, another victim and recipient of the 2023 Sakharov Prize, said of Araghchi’s comments, “I became very upset and angry. It’s as if we are not of that country.

"We peacefully took to the streets with empty hands to protest, but after being injured, we were afraid to go to the hospital, fearing arrest at any moment.

"We even had to lie about the cause of our eye injuries in our medical records. I am a mother, I’ve been injured, and my daughter and my family have also suffered. My life was shattered after that, and I was even forced to migrate.”

She addressed Araghchi, saying: “Mr. Araghchi, we are also from that country - we all lived, studied, and worked there to be useful. But you have done the most unjust and immoral thing to us, and I will never forgive you for killing and blinding the young people of Iran.”

‘You Have No Honor’

Kowsar Eftekhari, another victim of the crackdown on the Woman, Life, Freedom movement, reacted to Araghchi’s comments and recalled the pain of losing her eye.

She said, “His words brought back memories of the days when my eye didn’t need to be removed, but the doctors insisted on removing it. When I was blind, I was taken to the Imam Hossein psychiatric hospital in Tehran. In the terrible condition I was in, they tried to admit me to the mental hospital.”

She added, “I recall these memories, and when I see the Islamic Republic supporting Hezbollah in Lebanon, my hatred and disgust for the Islamic Republic grow even more.”

Addressing Araghchi, she said, “There is so much hatred in me that I don’t even want to say his name, but if I were to speak to Mr. Araghchi, I would say that there is no honor or humanity in people like him.”

‘We’ve Seen Nothing But Suffering and Torment from You’

Mohammad Farzi, another victim, a theater and cultural activist known professionally as the “Joker of Tehran,” said, “We grew up in an environment that was truly against us. We fought for our rights, got hurt, and did this to my eyes, yet all we received was aggression, pressure, and confrontation.

"Treatment? Treatment under fear? I couldn’t even trust the hospitals. You send groups [to Lebanon] to help? Shame on you.”

Farzi addressed Araghchi, saying: “Mr. Araghchi, I am a citizen who was active socially and culturally before and after the protests, fighting for my country and people, and I will continue to fight.

"You have only created inhuman conditions. Know this: we will never be silent. Shame on you for not valuing our lives enough to say we were your citizens. We’ve seen nothing from you but suffering and torment.”

‘Those Same Iranian Specialists Should Have Treated My Eye’

Arastoo Pasyar, another eye injury victim, expressed shock when he heard Araghchi’s comments about the medical care provided to Hezbollah fighters.

He said, “Did Mr. Araghchi really not see the hundreds of eye-injured victims whose cases were publicized, that he can easily say they treated 100 Hezbollah members with the best equipment?”

Pasyar lost the vision in his left eye during the protests when the Islamic Republic’s forces shot him in the eye.

Recalling his first attempt to seek medical care after being hit by a pellet, he said the hospital staff told him that the hospital was a security zone and would not accept him.

Addressing Araghchi, he said, “Mr. Araghchi, now that you are comfortably sitting and serving foreigners, you considered us foreigners.

"The same Iranian specialists you mentioned should have treated my eye, not German doctors. I don’t speak the language here, don’t know the addresses, and cannot communicate my pain to the doctors here, but those specialists could have understood me and done a better job for me, for our youth, for our children, for a better future.”

‘Were We Not From Iran?’

Adnan Hosseini, another victim with an eye injury who lost vision in one of his eyes during the 2022 protests, said that hearing Araghchi’s remarks broke his heart.

“For a moment, all the events that happened to me flashed before my eyes. What pain I suffered for something as simple as treatment.

"When Mr. Araghchi says they transferred these people by private plane to Iran, I remember the night when I couldn’t be transferred by ambulance from Kurdistan to Farabi Hospital in Tehran.”

He addressed Araghchi, saying: “If Mr. Araghchi and his followers are hearing, I want to ask them: Were we not children of Iran? Why should you treat us in a way that no Iranian deserves? How cruel can a person be? How cruel can a government be to its own people?

"I can’t understand how you can treat a foreign person in just a few hours but throw away someone who is made of your own flesh and blood. I can never forgive people like Mr. Araghchi.”

‘Why Are Their Children Important, But Not Ours?’

Nechirvan Maroufi-Azar, another protester who was shot in the eye, said that when he heard Abbas Araghchi’s comments about the specialized and medical aid provided by the Islamic Republic to injured Hezbollah fighters in Lebanon, he felt a sense of “hatred” and “anger.”

He said, “I think they don’t care about Iranian children, but they care more about Lebanese children - just as they shot at us to kill us.”

Addressing Araghchi directly, he said: “Mr. Araghchi, have you really not heard about the injuries of those in the Woman, Life, Freedom movement over these years?

"So many girls and boys have been injured in various ways - eyes, hands, legs, and paralyzed. Didn’t you see them? Couldn’t you take our injured to a doctor at your own expense? Why are their children important, but not ours? You shot directly at us. It didn’t matter to you. You attacked us in the hospitals. Why? Why weren’t we important to you?”

How Different Would Things Be if Victims Had Access to Immediate Treatment?

According to over two years of research by IranWire on eye injuries sustained during protests in Iran, the lack of timely treatment, the heavy presence of security forces in hospitals and medical clinics during the protests, threats to medical staff from the Islamic Republic to prevent treatment of the injured, and the reluctance of victims to visit hospitals due to fear of arrest, have been key factors contributing to the partial or complete loss of vision for many protesters.

Several ophthalmologists around the world, after reviewing the medical records of the victims, explained to IranWire that if many of them had access to specialist doctors and received immediate treatment, their eyes would still be functional today, and they wouldn’t have lost their sight.

Professor Amir Mobarez, an ophthalmologist based in Germany and a member of the Munich Circle human rights group, confirmed this after reviewing several cases of injured individuals.

 

Conil

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Apr 12, 2013
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I'm sure the therapy at the clinic is beating the shit out of them or killing them


An Iranian state Islamic body announced plans on Tuesday for a new Tehran clinic to treat women flouting mandatory headscarves, in the latest example of authorities treating opponents of the rule as mentally ill.

Iran’s first counseling clinic explicitly dedicated to promoting mandatory hijab laws will provide "scientific and psychological treatment for hijab removal," said Mehri Talebi Darestani, the woman due to oversee the facility.

“The establishment of this center will be for the scientific and psychological treatment of removing the hijab, specifically for the teenage generation, young adults, and women seeking social and Islamic identity and visiting this center is optional," she added.

The wording of the clinic's mission statement closely resembles that of substance abuse facilities. Prominent activists and human rights advocates have condemned official attempts to pathologize opposition to the hijab.

A university student who stripped in apparent protest at harsh treatment by dress code enforcers was detained and sent for mental health treatment, officials said this month. Authorities have frequently described as insane proponents of the country’s Woman, Life, Freedom anti-hijab movement, which was sparked by the September 2022 death of Mahsa Amini while in the custody of morality police.

A controversial leader at the helm

Darestani's office is part of Iran's Headquarters for Promotion of Virtue and Prevention of Vice, the body is responsible for defining and enforcing strict religious standards in society, particularly women's dress.

It is led by a man, Mohammed Saleh Hashemi Golpayegani, a direct appointee of appointed by Iranian Supreme Leader, Ali Khamenei.

Talebi Darestani said that the clinic responds to visits by women and families pressured into non-compliance with hijab laws, adding that the project aligns with a roadmap for promoting “dignity, modesty, chastity, and hijab.”

A focus of controversy in the past, Talebi Darastani has supported and promoted child marriage on state television.

Previously the head of the Ministry of Labor's Inspection Center, she was dismissed from that post in 2023 under unclear circumstances, fueling debate over her recent appointment to her new hijab enforcement role.

Responses and growing tensions over hijab enforcement

Recent public reactions to the clinic show persistent tensions surrounding hijab enforcement. A widely publicized incident last month at the Islamic Azad University’s in Tehran brought the issue back into the global spotlight.

In protest against enforcement measures on campus, a female student named Ahoo Daryaei, removed her clothing in defiance of security staff intervening over her hijab.

Daryaei was transferred to a psychological center shortly after her arrest, drawing accusations from activists that the government is attempting to undermine her protest by portraying her actions as mentally aberrant.

This practice of publicly gaslighting protestors has been seen by critics as a deliberate strategy to delegitimize dissent.

Iranian authorities have increasingly utilized mental health institutions to manage dissent, a method condemned by human rights advocates as psychologically abusive and manipulative.

Following the 2022 protests, artists who posted images of themselves without a hijab, including actresses like Afsaneh Bayegan, Azadeh Samadi, and Leila Bolukat, received court-ordered mandates for weekly visits to psychological centers for mental health certificates in response to their conduct.


The ethical debate over state involvement in psychiatry

Iran’s psychiatric and psychological community has responded critically to the state’s perceived manipulation of mental health diagnoses to silence opposition.

In 2023, four Iranian psychiatric associations issued a joint statement condemning the government’s use of non-scientific diagnoses such as anti-family personality disorder as a pretext for punishing hijab protestors.

The statement decried the practice as a violation of professional ethics, highlighting specific principles from Iran’s Professional Ethics Charter for Psychiatry, which has been in place since 2015.

This charter explicitly prohibits psychiatric professionals from engaging in discriminatory actions against individuals based on religious, ethnic, or gender identities.

Clause six of the charter warns against discrimination, while clause seven emphasizes the importance of shielding mental health practice from unqualified or politically motivated interventions.

A shift in leadership without policy reform

Despite President Masoud Pezeshkian’s assurances during his campaign to ease the hijab mandate, programs like the Clinic for Quitting Hijab Removal may reflect an inability to challenge conservative factions and enact promised reforms.

The persistence of hijab enforcement measures under Pezeshkian’s administration has sparked questions regarding his influence over Iran’s religious institutions and highlights the struggle to balance public sentiment with ideological mandates.

With mounting international scrutiny and domestic resistance, the efforts to reframe and manage public dissent through psychiatry are likely to fuel further controversy over Iran’s approach to human rights and individual freedoms.

They'll put them in a tree shredder
 
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