Abdorrahman Boroumand Center

for Human Rights in Iran

https://www.iranrights.org
Omid, a memorial in defense of human rights in Iran
One Person’s Story

Mahsa (Jina) Amini

About

Age: 22
Nationality: Iran
Religion: Islam (Sunni)
Civil Status: Single

Case

Date of Killing: September 16, 2022
Gravesite location is known: Yes
Location of Killing: Tehran's Morality Police, Tehran, Tehran Province, Iran
Mode of Killing: Execution » Death in custody

About this Case

The arrest and subsequent death in custody of Mahsa (Jina) Amini, a 22-year-old Kurdish woman from Saqqez, at the hands of the morality police, sparked widespread protests and the “Women, Life, Freedom” movement in Iran.

Information regarding the death in custody of Ms. Mahsa (Jina) Amini, daughter of Amjad and Mojgan, was gathered from BBC Persian (September 18, 2022, and September 2023); reports of the UN Fact-Finding Mission (August and March 2024); Shargh Newspaper (September 16, 2022); Ham-Mihan Newspaper (September 16 and 18, 2022); Iran International (September 16 and 19, 2022); IranWire (September 14, 2022, and December 12, 2023); Radio Farda (September 14 and 17, 2023); the 20:30 news program of IRIB Channel 2 (September 16, 2022); the Instagram page of Kasra Hospital (September 13, 2022); Deutsche Welle (September 21 and October 25, 2022); Fars News Agency (September 19, 2022); ISNA (September 15, 2022); and Voice of America (September 18, 2022). Additional information was also obtained from BBC Persian (October 27, 2022, and September 16, 2023); ISNA (September 21, October 10, and October 26, 2022); Euronews (September 26, 2022); Etemad Newspaper (October 8, 2022); the Ekhtebar website (October 16, 2022); IRNA (October 25, 2022); Radio Farda (October 27, 2022); Kurdistan Human Rights Network (October 1, 2023); the website of the European Parliament (December 12, 2023); Libération (September 26, 2022); Reuters (October 7 and December 14, 2022); TagSpiegel (December 13, 2022); and the UN Human Rights Council (November 25, 2022).

Mahsa (Jina) Amini was born on October 8, 2000, into a Kurdish Sunni family in Saqqez, in Iran's Kurdistan Province. Since her family did not want her to start school a year later, her date of birth was officially recorded as September 15, 2000. Among her family and close relatives, she was always called Jina, a Kurdish name meaning "new life." According to her mother, her official name was recorded as Mahsa due to restrictions on registering Kurdish names and concerns about potential obstacles in school and university enrollment. Ms. Amini had only one sibling: a younger brother named Ashkan who was four years her junior. The two shared a very close bond (BBC Persian, September 18, 2022; September 18, 2023).

Ms. Amini attended Resalat Elementary School near her home in Saqqez. In high school, she chose the natural sciences track, aspiring to pursue medical or pharmaceutical studies. In addition to completing a pharmacy technician course, she was admitted to the University of Urmia in 2022 to study microbiology and planned to move there for her studies. According to her mother, Ms. Amini was so interested in medicine that she had purchased all the necessary medical instruments. She always said, 'My only goal is to serve humanity. I want to awaken the human spirit'” (BBC Persian, September 18, 2022; BBC Persian, September 18, 2023).

Jina was interested in radio broadcasting and often practiced at home. Although her father had set up a clothing store for her in Saqqez, she had little interest in the business and preferred to dedicate herself to academic pursuits and her personal passions, according to her mother. Her mother further noted that Jina did not have many friends and that her closest and dearest friend was her mother herself; they spent most of their time together (BBC Persian, September 18, 2023).

According to her family and relatives, Ms. Amini had been "healthy and calm" since childhood and "always had a smile on her face." Her father described her as "a quiet, modest person who minded her own business" (Deutsche Welle, September 21, 2022). A cousin who was very close to her recalled: "Her parents never raised their voices at her," and said she was beloved by all members of the extended family (Ham-Mihan, September 18, 2022).

In September 2022, Mahsa (Jina) Amini traveled with her family to northern Iran, then to Tehran. On her way to visit relatives at her aunt’s house, she was arrested by the morality police (BBC Persian, September 18, 2023; Ham-Mihan, September 16 and 18, 2022).

Arrest and detention

On Tuesday, September 13, 2022, Ms. Mahsa (Jina) Amini was arrested by the morality police in Tehran. Less than two hours later, she was transferred to Kasra Hospital, displaying symptoms of brain death. She passed away on September 16, 2022, after spending three days in a coma.

On September 13 at approximately 6:30 p.m., Ms. Amini and her brother were exiting the Shahid Haqqani metro station on the Haqqani Expressway in Tehran when the morality police stopped Ms. Amini because of her attire. When her brother tried to intervene, telling the officers that they were from out of town, they twisted his arm to restrain him. Ms. Amini was ultimately placed in a police van and taken to the Moral Security Police detention center on Vozara Street in Tehran for a "re-education and guidance class," according to officials (IranWire, September 14, 2022; Radio Farda, September 14, 2023).

According to Ms. Amini's brother and father, some of the young women detained and transported in the same van confirmed that she was subjected to "physical violence" inside the vehicle (IranWire, September 14, 2022; Radio Farda, September 14, 2023).

Ms. Amini collapsed 26 minutes after arriving at the Moral Security Police detention center. Thirty minutes later, at 8:22 p.m., she was transferred to Kasra Hospital (UN Fact-Finding Mission report, March 2024).

On September 16, 2022, IRIB Channel 2's 20:30 news program broadcast a one-minute video from the detention center's CCTV cameras. The footage showed Ms. Amini in a waiting room with other young women. She appeared to be in a conversation with a female officer while pointing to her coat. Suddenly, and without any apparent aggressive encounter between them, Ms. Amini collapsed to the ground. The footage cut off at that moment. The video contained no timestamps indicating the exact sequence of events (IRIB Channel 2, 20:30 News Program, September 16, 2022, archived by ABC).

Hospital staff initially received Ms. Amini as an “unidentified” patient since the police did not provide her personal details. Following her brother’s interview and the widespread news coverage of the incident, Tehran police issued a statement: "A woman had been taken to one of Tehran's police departments for guidance and education when she suddenly suffered a heart attack among other individuals." They rejected claims spread by what they called “hostile media” (Voice of America, September 18, 2022; ISNA, September 15, 2022).

Both her father and brother reported signs of facial swelling, bruises on her legs, and bleeding from her ears. Citing the testimony of individuals who were in the morality police van, her father said that the bruises on her legs were caused by being beaten with a stick inside the vehicle. He reported this to the director of Kasra Hospital, requesting that the Forensic Medicine Organization investigate, but received no response (UN Fact-Finding Mission report, March 2024; Voice of America, September 18, 2022).

On September 13, 2022, Kasra Hospital released a statement declaring that Ms. Amini “was admitted with symptoms of brain death, received resuscitation, and remained in a coma with three percent consciousness in the ICU for two days. On September 16 at 3:40 p.m., she suffered cardiac arrest and died.” Four days later, the statement was deleted from the hospital’s Instagram page. Physicians at Kasra Hospital noted that Ms. Amini's life might have been saved if she had been brought in just ten minutes earlier. Following her death, her body was immediately transferred to the Forensic Medicine Organization. Her official death certificate listed the cause of death as "unknown" (Ham-Mihan, September 18 and 16, 2022; Kasra Hospital Instagram, September 13, 2022; UN Fact-Finding Mission report, March 2024).

On September 19, 2022, Iran International published exclusive CT scan images of Ms. Amini, reportedly obtained by a hacker group. According to medical experts consulted by the outlet, the scans showed a skull fracture on the right side of her head and fluid accumulation in the lungs, consistent with a coma induced by severe head trauma. That same day, Fars News Agency confirmed the images' authenticity but, citing neurologists and radiologists, claimed there was no evidence of head trauma or hemorrhage. They attributed the observed changes to previous brain surgery and stated that the lung condition resulted from cardiopulmonary resuscitation (Fars, September 19, 2022).

News of Ms. Amini’s death in morality police custody quickly sparked widespread public reaction. Crowds gathered near Kasra Hospital, chanting, "Morality police, murderous police." Videos circulated of people honking car horns in protest, shouting from rooftops, and chanting slogans such as "Death to Khamenei" and "Death to the dictator" (Iran International, September 16, 2022).

On September 17, 2022, Jina Amini’s body was moved to Saqqez for burial. The large crowd at the funeral prevented the authorities from carrying out a rapid, quiet burial. Attendees chanted protest slogans, including "Jin, Jiyan, Azadi" (Women, Life, Freedom), which was first voiced at her graveside and later became the defining slogan of the nationwide protests (Hengaw Human Rights Organization YouTube channel, April 19, 2025). Protests spread into the city later that day (Radio Farda, September 17, 2022; Iran International, September 16, 2022).

Public protests over Ms. Amini’s death and against the morality police continued after her burial, evolving into an unprecedented nationwide movement against the Islamic Republic. Approaching the fortieth day since Ms. Amini’s death, women’s groups, Kurdish parties, and numerous universities across Iran issued statements calling for mass gatherings.

The fortieth-day ceremony was held under tight surveillance, and her family was placed under house arrest and barred from attending. According to state media, nearly 10,000 people from across Iran gathered at Aichi Cemetery in Saqqez. Some attendees chanted, "Death to the dictator." This event became one of the largest public protests against the Islamic Republic (Radio Farda, September 14, 2023; BBC Persian, October 27, 2022; ISNA, October 26, 2022).

On the anniversary of her death, security forces once again established a strong presence in Saqqez. Access roads to Aichi Cemetery were blocked, and security agents surrounded her family and prevented them from leaving their home to visit her grave (Radio Farda, September 16, 2023).

Mahsa (Jina) Amini was 22 years old at the time of her death. Her gravestone in Aichi Cemetery bears the following inscription in Kurdish: "Dear Jina, you will not die; your name will become a symbol." (Based on video archives and ABC's visual archive.)

Official’s reaction

Following Ms. Amini’s death on September 16, 2022, the Tehran Police Headquarters issued an official statement. The statement declared that on Tuesday, September 13, 2022, Ms. Amini and several other individuals had been transferred by the Moral Security Police to one of its centers due to their “improper attire.” According to the statement, Ms. Amini “suddenly fainted” in a hallway and was immediately transferred to the nearest hospital with the help of police and emergency services. However, medical interventions were unsuccessful. The police also stated that they had shown her family CCTV footage of her time in the detention center, from the time of her arrival until her transfer by emergency personnel (Shargh Newspaper, September 16, 2022).

While Ms. Amini was hospitalized at Kasra Hospital, police were surveilling the facility. According to her brother, he was not allowed to take pictures of her, and the family was under surveillance. Following the announcement of her death, security forces arrested several people who had gathered in front of the hospital (Ham Mihan, September 18, 2022; IranWire, September 14, 2022; Iran International, September 16, 2022).

Immediately after news of her death spread, widespread internet disruptions were reported. The organization NetBlocks announced that internet connectivity in Tehran had dropped to around 67 percent of normal levels. Officials did not formally acknowledge responsibility for the disruptions (Iran International, September 16, 2022).

According to her cousin, Erfan Morteza'i, Iranian authorities forced Ms. Amini’s parents and brother to appear on state television, preventing them from speaking with foreign media. Officials also attempted to bury her secretly, but the people of Saqqez discovered the plan and prevented it. Her father later stated that the governor and parliamentary representative of Saqqez had insisted on a nighttime burial during the transfer of her body (Euronews, September 26, 2022; Voice of America, September 18, 2022).

Security officials arrested three journalists who had reported on the case and interviewed Amini’s family: Elaheh Mohammadi on September 20, Nilufar Hamedi on September 21, and Nazila Marufian on October 30, 2022. They were charged with "activities against national security" and "propaganda against the state" (UN Fact-Finding Mission report, March 2024).

On September 18, 2022, Hossein Karampur, president of the Hormozgan Medical Council, wrote to the head of the Iranian Medical Council. He noted that photographs of Mahsa (Jina) Amini in the hospital, showing "bleeding from the ear and bruising under the eyes," did not correspond to the "heart attack" explanation offered by some authorities. Rather, they were consistent with "head trauma and resulting hemorrhage." Karampur called on the organization to act "with honesty and courage" in clarifying the truth, stating that "the people will only consider us as one of their own if we stand by them as much as we can" (letter archived at ABC, September 18, 2022). In contrast, on September 21, 2022, Dr. Mehdi Foruzesh, director general of the Tehran Province Forensic Medicine Organization, denied any evidence of head or facial trauma, bruising around the eyes, or skull base fracture. He rejected reports of ear bleeding, skull fracture, and internal injuries and announced that the definitive cause of death would soon be reported to the judiciary (ISNA, September 21, 2022).

After the family filed a complaint, their lawyer stated that the judicial authorities had refused to provide them with access to Ms. Amini’s complete medical file. This file included 350 pages of documentation that Kasra Hospital had provided to the court (IranWire, December 12, 2023).

On October 1, 2022, the authorities convened a meeting of the medical review commission attended by Ms. Amini’s father and the family’s attorney. However, none of the family’s trusted physicians were permitted to participate. After the family protested, the deputy prosecutor and head of the Special Homicide Court promised to rectify the situation at the next meeting. However, about a week later, the Forensic Medicine Organization’s findings were officially broadcast on state television without their input (IranWire, December 12, 2023; Shargh Newspaper, October 18, 2023).

In its official report dated October 7, 2022, the Forensic Medicine Organization attributed Ms. Amini’s death to complications from a childhood brain tumor surgery (in 2007) and subsequent endocrine disorders. The report stated that her body “could not withstand the shock, leading to cardiac arrhythmia, low blood pressure, decreased consciousness, and ultimately severe cerebral hypoxia.” The report emphasized that Ms. Amini’s death was not caused by trauma and that no external injuries were found. Instead, it concluded that her death was due to pre-existing conditions (ISNA, October 7, 2022; Etemad, October 8, 2022).

At the direction of the president and the minister of interior, a government fact-finding committee was formed and led by Seyed Majid Mirahmadi, deputy minister of security and law enforcement. At a press conference on October 10, 2022, Mirahmadi announced that the government’s report confirmed the findings of the Forensic Medicine Organization and rejected claims of assault or intentional poisoning. He attributed the protests following her death to "exploitation by hostile media" (ISNA, October 10, 2022).

Speaker of Parliament Mohammad Baqer Qalibaf assigned the Parliamentary Commission on Domestic Affairs and Councils to investigate the case. In its final report on October 16, 2022, the commission stated that "no physical assault or trauma" occurred during her arrest and detention and that her death was not due to "a blow or impact from a hard object." The report cited two delays: approximately seven minutes and ten seconds from her collapse to the arrival of the first emergency technician and approximately six minutes and forty-four seconds from the ambulance's departure due to crowds outside the police facility. While these delays were not the main cause of death, the report noted that they "might not have been irrelevant" to the patient's outcome (Ekhtebar website, October 16, 2022).

On October 25, 2022, one day before the 40th-day memorial, IRNA published a statement attributed to the Amini family that said: "Given the circumstances, and to prevent any unfortunate incidents, we will not hold a fortieth-day ceremony for our beloved Jina." The same day, the human rights organization Hengaw reported that the family had issued the statement under severe pressure from security agencies and threats of arrest against their son. Two days later, Ms. Amini’s cousin stated that her parents and brother had been placed under house arrest on the fortieth day and that the governor of Saqqez had actually written the statement attributed to them. (IRNA, October 25, 2022; Hengaw Twitter, October 25, 2022; Radio Farda, October 27, 2022).

On the day of the fortieth-day ceremony, state media reported internet shutdowns in Saqqez due to "security considerations" (ISNA, October 26, 2022). 

The government announced that schools and universities in Kurdistan Province would be closed that day due to an alleged "influenza outbreak" and attempted to prevent the ceremony by blocking access roads to the cemetery. Riot police opened fire on protesters and arrested dozens (BBC Persian, October 27, 2022; Deutsche Welle, October 25, 2022).

According to her cousin, after the initial forensic findings were announced, security agents pressured the Amini family once again to remain silent and accept the report (Radio Farda, October 27, 2022).

Her attorney, Saleh Nikbakht, reported that security authorities had summoned him multiple times and demanded that he stop speaking to the foreign media. Despite complying, the Ministry of Intelligence filed a complaint against him. In late October 2023, Branch 28 of the Tehran Revolutionary Court, presided over by Judge Amoozad, tried Nikbakht on charges of “propaganda against the state” for his interviews with domestic and foreign media, as well as for “objecting to the forensic commission’s findings.” He was sentenced to one year in prison and a complementary punishment. According to Nikbakht, the court deemed his use of the word "murder" in an interview with Etemad newspaper as "propaganda against the state," though he argued that he used it in a legal sense within the context of a criminal court case (Kurdistan Human Rights Network, October 1, 2023; Shargh, October 18, 2023; Etemad, October 5, 2023).

On the first anniversary of Ms. Amini’s death in September 2023, security forces opened the gates of the Cheraghvis Dam, flooding alternate routes to Aichi Cemetery. They blocked the main access roads with armored vehicles and arrested numerous relatives and justice-seeking families across the country. Security forces surrounded the Amini home in Saqqez, arrested Ms. Amini’s father when he tried to leave, interrogated him, and then returned him to the house. This prevented the family from attending the ceremony (Radio Farda, September 16, 2023; BBC Persian, September 16, 2023).

Then, on December 8, 2023, security forces at the airport confiscated the Amini family’s passports and prevented them from traveling abroad to accept the Sakharov Prize, which was awarded to Mahsa (Jina) Amini and the “Women, Life, Freedom” movement (European Parliament website, December 12, 2023).

Family’s Reaction

In his first response to official claims that his daughter, Jina Amini, died due to cardiac or pre-existing conditions, as well as to the release of CCTV footage, her father stated: "Jina was healthy, and those who claim she had epilepsy or a heart condition are lying. The worst she ever had was a common cold. They made all of this up. The video they showed from the detention center was edited. Why didn't they show the moment my daughter was taken out of the van? Why didn't they show what happened in the detention center corridors? They put her under so much psychological pressure that it caused this tragedy." (Ham-Mihan, September 18, 2022).

"Dear Jina, you are not dead; your name will become a symbol."

(From the inscription on Mahsa Amini’s gravestone in Aichi Cemetery.)

In early October 2022, the Amini family, represented by attorneys Saleh Nikbakht and Ali Reza'i, filed a criminal complaint with the Tehran Criminal Court against those involved in Mahsa Amini's arrest, from the moment she arrived at the hands of the Morality Police to her interrogation and investigation. During a meeting with the head of the Special Judicial Complex, the family and their lawyers were assured that all footage and photos from the time of her arrest until her transfer to the hospital would be provided. They also requested that the family's trusted physicians be present alongside forensic medicine experts during her medical examinations. (ISNA, September 28, 2022; IranWire, December 12, 2023).

However, because none of the family’s trusted physicians were invited to the medical commission reviewing Ms. Amini’s cause of death, the family formally objected to the commission’s findings. They requested a new commission that would include their nominated doctors. According to the family’s lawyer, "Apart from objecting to the Forensic Medicine opinion as an expert report, we had no other objection. Unfortunately, even this was not accepted, and the case remained in limbo." (Shargh Network, October 18, 2023).

Ms. Amini’s father said that the mother of the two young women who were in the morality police van at the time of Jina’s arrest attended the funeral. Out of fear, however, she refrained from providing details, saying, "We have already lost one; we don’t want to lose more. We have young sons and daughters." (Ham-Mihan, September 18, 2022).

The Amini family resisted pressure from the security forces to hold an early, quiet burial without family and friends present. On the way to Saqqez, Jina’s father responded to the governor and the city’s parliamentary representative's insistence on a night burial: "If you insist on forcing this, then bury her yourselves—but I will file a complaint and tell the world that the governor stole my child’s body." (Voice of America, September 18, 2022).

At the Sakharov Prize ceremony, Jina’s mother, Mojgan Eftekhari, sent a message that was read by their attorney. "Jina’s sorrow is eternal to me, and she will be remembered by people around the world. I believe her name will stand alongside Joan of Arc as a symbol of freedom. From the birthplace of our eternal Jina, I extend my family’s gratitude to you, and I hope you remain steadfast in your decision. May no voice fear to speak of freedom." (European Parliament website, December 12, 2023).

International Reactions

Ms. Amini's death prompted widespread and unprecedented international reactions. Human rights organizations, such as Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch, as well as political leaders, including Jake Sullivan, the U.S. National Security Advisor, and Mas'ud Qarahkhani, the President of the Norwegian Parliament, explicitly held the Iranian authorities responsible for her killing. A wave of solidarity emerged in the public and cultural spheres: Global newspapers and media outlets led with the story for weeks, and the slogan "Women, Life, Freedom" appeared everywhere—from the front pages of outlets such as Libération to iconic landmarks like Berlin's Brandenburg Gate. Meanwhile, several prominent female politicians and artists abroad cut their hair in solidarity with Iranian women. (Euronews, October 15, 2022; Reuters, October 7, 2022; Libération, September 26, 2022; Tagesspiegel, December 13, 2022; Iran International, September 16, 2022).

On November 24, 2022, the UN Human Rights Council held a special session during which it adopted a resolution mandating the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights to establish an independent fact-finding mission composed of three international legal experts. The mission was tasked with investigating and documenting human rights violations in Iran during and following the death of Mahsa (Jina) Amini. On December 14, 2022, the UN Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC) removed the Islamic Republic of Iran from the Commission on the Status of Women by majority vote and at the initiative of the United States in response to discriminatory policies and the suppression of women-led protests. (UN Human Rights Council, November 25, 2022; Reuters, December 14, 2022).

In its initial report in March 2024, the UN Fact-Finding Mission emphasized that Ms. Amini’s arrest under mandatory hijab laws was arbitrary, discriminatory, and contrary to international law. According to the Mission, her death in custody was a clear violation of her fundamental rights. In light of the available evidence, claims of a pre-existing illness could not account for the direct cause of death. Based on reasonable grounds and the documented signs of trauma resulting from physical violence by morality police officers, the Mission held the authorities responsible for Ms. Amini’s unlawful death. The Mission noted that the government of Iran failed to conduct a prompt, independent, and transparent investigation and instead concealed the truth. The government also intimidated the Amini family, arbitrarily arrested some relatives, and criminally prosecuted and imprisoned the family’s attorney, Saleh Nikbakht, as well as three journalists who pursued the case. Additionally, in a detailed report released in August 2023, the Mission stated: "The Mission concludes that Ms. Amini was subjected to physical violence while in custody and that such violence led to her death. The morality police are therefore responsible for her unlawful death” (UN Fact-Finding Mission reports, August 2023 and March 2024).

The European Parliament awarded the 2023 Sakharov Prize for Freedom of Thought to Mahsa (Jina) Amini and the "Women, Life, Freedom" movement. Saleh Nikbakht, Afsun Najafi (the sister of Hadis Najafi, one of those killed during the 2022 protests), and Mersedeh Shahinkar (a protester who sustained a blinding eye injury) received the award on their behalf. The Amini family did not attend the ceremony. The then-President of the European Parliament condemned the confiscation of the family’s passports by security agents and their subsequent barring from the ceremony. He called for the immediate reversal of the decision. (European Parliament website, December 12, 2023).

Impact on the Family

Mahsa (Jina) Amini's sudden death had a profound impact on her family. Her father said, "Her place will never be filled for me. I am her father. People are heartbroken, but no one is as devastated as I am. No one can take her place. She was my companion. She was always by my side. Her absence is overwhelming” (Deutsche Welle, September 21, 2022).

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