Public anger reignited over Iranian teen’s mysterious metro assault

Passengers enter a metro station at the bazaar in Tehran (REUTERS)
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Updated 06 October 2023
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Public anger reignited over Iranian teen’s mysterious metro assault

  • Mahsa Amini got arrested for allegedly violating the strict dress rules for women
  • The case has become the subject of intense discussion on social media

Paris: Western governments on Wednesday expressed concern after an alleged assault by Iranian security forces had reportedly left a teenager in a coma, with Germany’s top diplomat dubbing the incident “intolerable.”
A rights group also called for an international investigation into the confrontation on the Tehran metro, just over a year after the death in custody of Mahsa Amini who had been arrested for allegedly violating the strict dress rules for women.
Armita Garawand, 16, was attacked on Sunday by female police officers, according to the Kurdish-focused rights group Hengaw.
Iranian authorities have claimed she “fainted” due to low blood pressure, denying any involvement of security forces.
Iranian authorities have remained on high alert for any upsurge of social tension around and after the September 16 anniversary of Amini’s death, which last year triggered months of unrest.
The nationwide protest movement had rattled Iran’s clerical leadership before dwindling in the face of a crackdown that according to activists saw hundreds killed and thousands arrested.
“Once again a young woman in Iran is fighting for her life. Just because she showed her hair on the subway,” German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock wrote on X, formerly Twitter.
“It’s intolerable.”
Abram Paley, the acting US special envoy on Iran, posted on X that Washington was “shocked and concerned about reports that Iran’s so-called morality police have assaulted” the teenager.
“We are following news of her condition. We continue to stand with the brave people of Iran and work with the world to hold the regime accountable for its abuses,” Paley added.
The case has become the subject of intense discussion on social media, with a purported video of the incident said by some to show Garawand, apparently unveiled, being pushed into the metro by police agents and then an immobile body pulled out.
Norway-based NGO Iran Human Rights urged “an independent international investigation... to establish the details” of the incident, accusing Tehran of “a long history of distorting facts and concealing evidence of their crimes.”
“The Islamic republic continues its harassment and repression of women under the guise of fighting mandatory hijab violations,” said the group’s director, Mahmood Amiry-Moghaddam.
Hengaw said that Garawand was being treated under tight security at Tehran’s Fajr hospital.
It published a picture it said was of Garawand on her hospital bed, attached to a feeding tube with her head and neck heavily bandaged.
Her parents gave an interview to Iranian state media at the hospital “under considerable pressure” and “in the presence of high-ranking security officers,” Hengaw said.
Baerbock said the family should not have to “be in front of cameras, but have the right to be at their daughter’s bedside.”
A resident of Tehran, Garawand hails from the city of Kermanshah in Iran’s Kurdish-populated west, Hengaw said.
Maryam Lotfi, a journalist from the Shargh daily newspaper, sought in the aftermath of the incident to visit the hospital but was immediately detained, Hengaw said, adding she was subsequently released.


Turkiye seals preliminary deals for largest foreign-funded railway project

Turkey's Transport Minister Abdulkadir Uraloglu. (AFP file photo)
Updated 25 February 2026
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Turkiye seals preliminary deals for largest foreign-funded railway project

  • The funding will support the 125 km (78 mile) long Northern Ring Railway Project, which will ⁠carry passengers and freight from Gebze ‌to Halkali via ‌the Yavuz Sultan Selim ​Bridge connecting Istanbul’s ‌two main airports

ISTANBUL: Turkiye ‌has reached preliminary agreements with six international lenders to secure $6.75 billion for a new railway ​line across the Bosphorus in what would be Turkiye’s largest foreign-financed railway project, Transport Minister Abdulkadir Uraloglu said on Tuesday.
Once completed, the line that will pass through north Istanbul is expected to carry 33 million passengers ‌and 30 million ‌tons of freight ​annually, ‌he ⁠said, ​adding that ⁠it will open “a new era in logistics” by boosting the country’s rail capacity between Asia and Europe.
The funding will support the 125 km (78 mile) long Northern Ring Railway Project, which will ⁠carry passengers and freight from Gebze ‌to Halkali via ‌the Yavuz Sultan Selim ​Bridge connecting Istanbul’s ‌two main airports.
Preliminary deals were reached ‌with the World Bank, Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank, Asian Development Bank, Islamic Development Bank, OPEC Fund for International Development and the European Bank ‌for Reconstruction and Development, the minister said.
“We aim to complete ⁠the ⁠tender process and hand over the site this year so that (construction) work can start,” Uraloglu said.
An uninterrupted rail freight across the Bosphorus Strait is currently possible through the Marmaray railway tunnel and only during limited hours daily. According to the ministry’s website, a total of just 1.7 million tons of cargo ​were transported through ​Marmaray between 2020 and October 2025.