Six Iranian women have been forced to '
repent' on national television for posting a video on YouTube of themselves dancing unveiled with men. The video has garnered
nearly 700,000 views since being posted on YouTube on Monday. This is from the first link.
The video was reportedly uploaded to YouTube late last month; one upload of the six dancing in Tehran
to Williams' catchy song promoting happiness has already garnered over
half a million views on YouTube since being posted Monday.
A source close to those arrested said armed police raided the
home of one of them on Sunday, wantonly destroying private property in
the house as they arrested the woman and her friends, reports The Daily Beast.
In jail, the six reportedly were not allowed to use the toilet, put
in solitary confinement and constantly interrogated about the clip and
comments they had made to foreign media. The women were reportedly
forced to strip naked and perform squats before female officers.
The persecution and humiliation reached a head on Tuesday, when they
were forced on national TV in front of Tehran Chief of Police Hossein
Sajedinia. They "confessed" being tricked to appear in the video, while
lined up with their backs to the camera and the women appearing with
large head coverings.
Sajedinia, in the role of interrogator and morale preacher, praised
the crackdown during the TV broadcast, saying "these (agents) were able
to identify (the six dancers) within two hours, and within six hours had
arrested them all."
Clips of the dancing video shown during the "confession" were blurred
out, apparently for "modesty." The national broadcast, in Farsi, can be
seen here:
Let's go to the videotape.
Siavash Taravati, who directed
and filmed the "criminal" video, said that in the "confession" broadcast
it was apparent how terrified the six were.
While the young Iranians
were in jail, allegedly Iranian police threatened their families saying
that if they spoke to the media their children would not be released.
The six eventually were released, but only after paying a bail of 30
million toman ($10,000), or 40 million toman in the case of one of the
women. Reportedly several cell phones, computers and cameras were
confiscated as well, in addition to the personal affects destroyed
during the arrest.
Given what
normally happens to women in Iranian jails, I suppose they were pretty lucky. Still, that must have been a harrowing experience.
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