By Farnaz Fassihi Hundreds of schoolgirls in Iran have been hospitalized in over ... removing their mandatory hijabs, tearing the pictures of officials and chanting, “Death to the dictator.” ...
Worried parents protested in Iran's capital Tehran and other cities on Saturday over a wave of suspected poison attacks that have affected schoolgirls ... on Saturday to protest over the illnesses ...
Protesters and others have raised the possibility that religious extremists may be targeting schoolgirls to stop them from receiving educations. Attacks on women have happened in the past in Iran ...
A week ago, on one day alone, upwards of 200 schoolgirls ... off their mandated hijabs, exposed the forbidden-to-be-seen hair in the theocratic Islamic Republic of Iran? If not in moral support ...
Nearly six months into to female-led protests sweeping Iran, support from American feminist groups appears almost ...
A terrifying crisis is unfolding in Iran ... sparked a historic protest movement, during which some of the bravest and most memorable demonstrations were led by schoolgirls.
(CNN)Iran has arrested more than 100 people "in connection with" the suspected poisoning of hundreds of schoolgirls across the country, according to the state-run IRNA news agency. Citing a ...
Holly Dagres, a senior fellow at the Atlantic Council whose focus is on Iran, joins Meet the Press NOW to discuss why schoolgirls are the targets of these attacks. IE 11 is not supported.
Scores of women also burnt their hijabs ... calls for protest on social media. Videos circulating on Twitter showed security forces firing teargas at demonstrators. The protests in Iran have ...
But even in the chaos surrounding the Islamic Revolution, no one targeted schoolgirls for attending classes. Iran itself also has been calling on the Taliban in neighboring Afghanistan to have ...