Nika: Tragic new face of Iran’s brutal crackdown on protesters

Nasreen Shakarami (Twitter)
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Updated 08 October 2022
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Nika: Tragic new face of Iran’s brutal crackdown on protesters

  • Girl, 16, killed by blows to the head
  • Iranians mock official claims she died in a fall

JEDDAH: A teenage girl beaten to death by police has emerged as the tragic new face of Iran’s brutal crackdown on protests sweeping the country.

Official Iranian claims that Nika Shakarami, 16, fell to her death from a high building have been mocked throughout the country, and her mother says the girl was killed by a series of blows to the head.

Nasreen Shakarami also says Iranian authorities kept her daughter’s death a secret for nine days, and then snatched the body from a morgue to bury her in a remote area, against the family’s wishes.

Nika left her home in Tehran on the afternoon of Sept. 19 to join the protests. Her mother was in touch with her by phone several times in the next few hours, pleading with Nika to come home. They last spoke before midnight. “Then Nika’s mobile was off, after she and her friends were shouting names of forces while they were fleeing,” Nasreen said.
The family searched for Nika at police stations and prisons, but had no news of her whereabouts for nine days. Authorities finally handed over the body on the 10th day, and the family headed to the city of Khoramabad for burial. Authorities repeatedly demanded to take possession of the body, which was being kept in the Khoramabad morgue.
On the day of the planned funeral the family learned that the body had been taken from the morgue and moved to a remote village for burial, under heavy security.
After the burial, Iran’s police chief Gen. Hossein Ashtari said Nika had visited a building on the day of her death, and fell from an upper floor. “The fall from that height led to her death,” he said.

However, Nasreen said a forensic report showed her daughter had died from repeated blows to the head.Nika’s body was intact, but some of her teeth, bones in her face and part of the back of her skull were broken, Nasreen said. “The damage was to her head,” she said. “Her body was intact, arms and legs.”

The protests, which begin their fourth week on Saturday, were sparked by the death of 22-year-old Mahsa Amini in the custody of the morality police. They had detained her for wearing her hijab in an “insufficiently modest manner.”
Young women have led the protests, tearing off their headscarves, cutting their hair and calling for the government to be toppled. Dissident groups say more than 400 protesters have been killed in the regime’s crackdown.
 


Israel’s Supreme Court suspends govt move to shut army radio

Updated 29 December 2025
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Israel’s Supreme Court suspends govt move to shut army radio

  • Israel’s Supreme Court has issued an interim order suspending a government decision to shut down Galei Tsahal, the country’s decades-old and widely listened-to military radio station

JERUSALEM: Israel’s Supreme Court has issued an interim order suspending a government decision to shut down Galei Tsahal, the country’s decades-old and widely listened-to military radio station.
In a ruling issued late Sunday, Supreme Court President Isaac Amit said the suspension was partly because the government “did not provide a clear commitment not to take irreversible steps before the court reaches a final decision.”
He added that Attorney General Gali Baharav-Miara supported the suspension.
The cabinet last week approved the closure of Galei Tsahal, with the shutdown scheduled to take effect before March 1, 2026.
Founded in 1950, Galei Tsahal is widely known for its flagship news programs and has long been followed by both domestic and foreign correspondents.
A government audience survey ranks it as Israel’s third most listened-to radio station, with a market share of 17.7 percent.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu had urged ministers to back the closure, saying there had been repeated proposals over the years to remove the station from the military, abolish it or privatise it.
But Baharav-Miara, who also serves as the government’s legal adviser and is facing dismissal proceedings initiated by the premier, has warned that closing the station raised “concerns about possible political interference in public broadcasting.”
She added that it “poses questions regarding an infringement on freedom of expression and of the press.”
Defense Minister Israel Katz said last week that Galei Tsahal broadcasts “political and divisive content” that does not align with military values.
He said soldiers, civilians and bereaved families had complained that the station did not represent them and undermined morale and the war effort.
Katz also argued that a military-run radio station serving the general public is an anomaly in democratic countries.
Opposition leader Yair Lapid had condemned the closure decision, calling it part of the government’s effort to suppress freedom of expression ahead of elections.
Israel is due to hold parliamentary elections in 2026, and Netanyahu has said he will seek another term as prime minister.

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