Iran frees actor Taraneh Alidoosti after three weeks in custody

Iranian actress Taraneh Alidoosti attends a photocall for the film "Leila's Brothers" during the 75th edition of the Cannes Film Festival in Cannes, southern France, on May 26, 2022. (AFP/File)
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Updated 04 January 2023
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Iran frees actor Taraneh Alidoosti after three weeks in custody

  • Daughter of a top footballer, Alidoosti has long been seen as a champion of women’s and civil rights

PARIS: Iranian authorities on Wednesday released on bail star actor Taraneh Alidoosti after holding her for almost three weeks over her support for the protest movement, her lawyer said.

Alidoosti is one of Iranian cinema’s most acclaimed stars, winning international renown for performances in award-winning films by director Asghar Farhadi, including the Oscar-winning 2016 movie “The Salesman.”

Her detention had prompted an outcry in the film industry and amplified concern about the authorities’ crackdown on more than three months of protests that have seen thousands arrested.

“My client was released on bail today (Wednesday),” lawyer Zahra Minooee told the ISNA news agency.

Images published by Iranian media, including the Shargh newspaper, showed her walking free from Tehran’s Evin prison clutching flowers and notably not wearing the Islamic headscarf, in apparent defiance of Iran’s strict dress laws.

Leading figures from the Iranian film industry still inside the country turned out to welcome her, including directors Mani Haghighi and Saeed Roustayi, the images showed.

Other pictures of her being driven away in a car showed her sticking out her tongue and flashing a “V” for victory sign.

“Iranian actress Taraneh Alidoosti released after three weeks in detention: What joy and relief!” tweeted the Cannes Film Festival. “Let’s stay involved!” it added.

Iran has been gripped by protests since the Sept. 16 death in custody of Mahsa Amini, an Iranian Kurd who was arrested for allegedly violating the country’s strict dress code.

Alidoosti, 38, was arrested on Dec. 17 after making a string of social media posts supporting the protest movement — including removing her headscarf and condemning the execution of protesters.

Over 600 artists worldwide, including actors Kate Winslet and Mark Rylance and director Pedro Almodovar, had signed an open letter calling for her release.

Her arrest “was a warning to public figures in Iran as part of the Iranian regime’s brutal crackdown on the nationwide Woman, Life, Freedom protests,” said the petition, published on the Instagram page of Hollywood actor Mark Ruffalo.

Alidoosti attended this year’s Cannes Film Festival to promote the acclaimed movie “Leila’s Brothers” in which she starred and which was directed by Roustayi.

She appeared in two of Farhadi’s earliest films before he won international renown, “Beautiful City” in 2004 and “Fireworks Wednesday” in 2006.

Alidoosti then appeared in the 2009 film “About Elly,” which earned Farhadi the Silver Bear for best director at the Berlin film festival, before reuniting for “The Salesman.”

The daughter of a former Iranian international footballer, Alidoosti has long been seen as a champion of women’s and civil rights in Iran.

On Nov. 9, she posted an image of herself without a headscarf, holding a paper with the words “Woman, life, freedom,” the main slogan of the protests.

Alidoosti had in a social media post vowed not to leave Iran and said she was prepared to “pay any price to stand up for my rights.”

Her Instagram account with more than 8 million followers has been inaccessible since her arrest.

Alidoosti’s most recent social media post was on December 8, the same day Mohsen Shekari, 23, became the first person executed by authorities over the protests.

“Your silence means the support of the oppression and the oppressor,” she wrote on Instagram.

A second protester, Majidreza Rahnavard, 23, was hanged in public on Dec. 12 and activists fear more risk of execution.

The judiciary’s Mizan Online news agency had said the actor was arrested as she “did not provide documentation for some of her claims” about the protests.

It complained that “a number of celebrities” had been publishing “provocative material in support of the street riots.”

The Oslo-based monitor Iran Human Rights said Iran’s security forces had killed at least 476 people in the protests, which Iranian officials generally describe as “riots.”


Elderly Palestinian shot dead in Rafah

Updated 5 sec ago
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Elderly Palestinian shot dead in Rafah

  • Death toll from Israel’s aggression on Gaza rises to 71,795 since start of assault in October 2023

GAZA: An elderly Palestinian man was killed by Israeli fire in Rafah on Sunday afternoon, bringing the number of fatalities since morning to two, according to local and medical sources.

The sources reported that Khaled Hammad Dahleez, 63, was shot dead by an Israeli drone northwest of Rafah.

Earlier in the day, another man was killed and several others injured in a drone strike north of Wadi Gaza, in the central Gaza Strip, the Palestinian News Agency reported.

BACKGROUND

On Saturday, at least 31 Palestinians, including children and women, were slaughtered in a series of Israeli airstrikes on several locations across the enclave — one of the deadliest days since the start of the ceasefire agreement on Oct. 11, 2025.

On Saturday, at least 31 Palestinians, including children and women, were slaughtered in a series of Israeli airstrikes on several locations across the war-ravaged enclave — one of the deadliest days since the start of the ceasefire agreement on Oct. 11, 2025.

Since the ceasefire took effect on Oct. 11, the number of people killed has risen to 523, with 1,433 injuries recorded, while 715 bodies have been recovered during the same period.

Medical sources said on Sunday the death toll from Israel’s aggression on the Gaza Strip had risen to 71,795 Palestinians killed and 171,551 injured since the start of the assault in October 2023.

The sources reported that 26 fatalities and 68 injuries were brought to Gaza hospitals over the past 48 hours, noting that numerous victims were trapped under rubble or in the streets, with ambulance and rescue crews unable to reach them.

The ceasefire’s first phase called for the exchange of all hostages held in Gaza for hundreds of Palestinians held by Israel, a surge in humanitarian aid and a partial pullback of Israeli troops.

The second phase is more complicated. It calls for installing a new Palestinian committee to govern Gaza, deploying an international security force, disarming Hamas, and taking steps to begin rebuilding.

Hamas has so far ‌rejected disarmament and Israel has repeatedly indicated that if the Islamist militant group is not disarmed peacefully, it will use force to make it do so.