
An amnesty has been declared for 22,000 people who participated in protests related to Mahsa Amini, who was detained by the vice police and died in Iran.
Amnesty was granted to the 22,000 demonstrators arrested during the Mahs Amini demonstrations in Iran who were not charged with “espionage, deliberate killing and injury, defacing state property and arson, warfare and world corruption”.
Iran’s judiciary Muhsin Ecey provided information on the prisoners subject to the amnesty decision signed by Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei on February 5 at a meeting of the Supreme Judiciary.
Ejei said that 82,000 people have benefited from the amnesty to date, and 22,000 of them were demonstrators who participated in the Mahs Amini protests. Ejei stated that the 22,000 people who were granted amnesty were arrested during the Mahs Amini demonstrations and were not charged with “espionage, deliberate killing and wounding, damaging public property and arson, hostilities and corrupting the world.”
Mahsa Amini, 22, who was taken to hospital after being detained on September 13 in Tehran, the capital of Iran, died on September 16. Demonstrations that began after Amini’s funeral in Sakkiz, his hometown, on September 17, spread to many cities across the country.
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