Supreme Leader Khamenei's niece urges world to cut ties with Iran over unrest: video
Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei's niece, a well-known rights activist, has called on foreign governments to cut all ties with Tehran over its violent crackdown on popular unrest kindled by the death in police custody of a young woman.
A video of a statement by Farideh Moradkhani, an engineer whose late father was a prominent opposition figure married to Khamenei's sister, was being widely shared online after what activist news agency HRANA said was her arrest on 23 November.
"O free people, be with us and tell your governments to stop supporting this murderous and child-killing regime," Moradkhani said in the video.
"This regime is not loyal to any of its religious principles and does not know any rules except force and maintaining power."
Khamenei's office did not immediately respond to a request for comment from Reuters.
HRANA said 450 protesters had been killed in more than two months of nationwide unrest as of 26 November, including 63 minors.
It said 60 members of the security forces had been killed, and 18,173 protesters detained.
The protests, sparked by the death of Kurdish Iranian woman Mahsa Amini, 22, after her arrest for "inappropriate attire", pose one of the strongest challenges to the country's clerical establishment since the 1979 Islamic Revolution. Amini's Kurdish first name can be spelt "Zhina" or "Jina".
Challenging the Islamic Republic's legitimacy, protesters from all walks of life have burned pictures of Khamenei and called for the downfall of Iran's Shia Muslim theocracy.
Her name is Farideh Moradkhani - she is the niece of the Islamic Republic’s leader, Ali Khamenei.
— Samira Mohyeddin سمیرا (@SMohyeddin) November 27, 2022
She likens him to Hitler, Mussolini & Ceaușescu.
“Tell your governments to stop supporting this murderous and child-killing regime.” #IranRevolution #mahsamini #مهساامینی #Iran pic.twitter.com/gFSQ1X1x4v
The video was shared on YouTube on Friday by her brother, France-based Mahmoud Moradkhani, who presents himself as "an opponent of the Islamic Republic" on his Twitter account, and then by prominent Iranian rights activists.
On 23 November, Mahmoud Moradkhani reported his sister's arrest as she was heeding a court order to appear at the Tehran prosecutor's office.
Farideh had been arrested earlier this year by Iran's intelligence ministry and later released on bail.
HRANA said she was in Tehran's Evin security prison. Moradkhani, it said, had earlier faced a 15-year prison sentence on unspecified charges.
How Iran's protests are exposing deep cracks in the ruling elite.#IranRevolution #IranProtests https://t.co/168lpw1rlD
— The New Arab (@The_NewArab) November 26, 2022
Her father, Ali Moradkhani Arangeh, was a Shia cleric married to Khamenei's sister and recently passed away in Tehran following years of isolation due to his stance against the Islamic Republic, according to his website.
Farideh Moradkhani added in her video: "Now is the time for all free and democratic countries to recall their representatives from Iran as a symbolic gesture and to expel the representatives of this brutal regime from their countries."
On Thursday, the United Nations top human rights body decided by a comfortable margin to establish a new investigative mission to look into Tehran's violent security crackdown on the anti-government protests.
Criticism of the Islamic Republic by relatives of top officials is not unprecedented.
In 2012, Faezeh Hashemi Rafsanjani, the daughter of late former president Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, was sentenced to jail for "anti-state propaganda".
(Reuters)