Moment an Iranian girl, 16, is dragged unconscious from a train ‘after morality officers attacked her for failing to wear hijab leaving her fighting for life in a coma’ in echo of Mahsa Amini case

An Iranian teenager has fallen into a coma after allegedly being attacked by state moral police for not wearing a mandatory hijab, following the treatment of 22-year-old Mahsa Amini.

Armita Geravand, 16, is currently under “strict measures” at an air force hospital in Iran’s capital Tehran, a civil rights group said.

Hengaw, a Norway-based Kurdish human rights NGO, claims Armita suffered “serious injuries” on Sunday morning when she was attacked by hijab officers at Shohada Station, a stop on the city’s metro, for allegedly not wearing a hijab. women in Iran are supposed to wear clothes under strict morality laws.

Unverified CCTV footage shared with local media appears to show the teenager walking to the train with two of her friends without a headscarf.

Upon entering the cabin, one of the girls is immediately seen backing away and reaching for the ground, before another girl is dragged unconscious from the cabin by passengers.

Armita was allegedly beaten by the Iranian moral police because she did not wear a headscarf

The human rights organization Hengaw shared a photo of Armita (pictured) in a comatose state in a hospital bed

The human rights organization Hengaw shared a photo of Armita (pictured) in a comatose state in a hospital bed

Armita is said to have fallen into a comatose state after boarding a train in Tehran's metro

Armita is said to have fallen into a comatose state after boarding a train in Tehran’s metro

Several passengers can be seen gathering to watch the girl being taken away.

Images from the train have not yet been released.

Hengaw later shared a photo of a young girl lying in a hospital bed with various medical equipment strapped to her, claiming it was an image of Armita.

A source told an Iranian news agency that she was “taken to hospital in a comatose state” and required resuscitation because she had either stopped breathing or her heart had stopped.

Authorities denied that this was a case of state abuse against yet another young woman.

Tehran Metro Operating Company head Masoud Dorosti said the CCTV footage showed no sign of verbal or physical conflict between passengers or company employees.

ā€œThere were no verbal or physical altercations between the student and passengers or subway employees. Rumors of a confrontation between the subway staff and the student are baseless and contradicted by the subway security footage,ā€ he said.

Armita’s parents publicly stated that their daughter suffered a drop in blood pressure, lost her balance and hit her head in the subway cab.

She was taken off the train by her friends and some passengers

She was taken off the train by her friends and some passengers

After she was taken off the train, several more passengers began to crowd around her

After she was taken off the train, several more passengers began to crowd around her

“I think my daughter’s blood pressure has dropped, I’m not sure, I think they said her blood pressure has dropped,” her mother said. But she added that there was no point in creating controversy.

But several activists, who spoke to Reuters on condition of anonymity, claim Iran has put heavy pressure on her parents.

ā€œHer relatives said there are a lot of civilian clothes in the hospital,ā€ said one of the activists in Iran.

The second activist said security forces had banned Armita’s parents from posting her photo on social media or speaking to human rights groups.

An Iranian journalist who investigated the incident was arrested and held by authorities for several hours after making inquiries at the hospital.

Iran’s Interior Ministry has not yet commented on the alleged attack on Armita.

Major world figures have already condemned Iran for the incident.

German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock said on X, formerly Twitter: ā€œOnce again a young woman in #Iran is fighting for her life. Just because she showed her hair on the subway. It’s unbearable.

“The parents of #ArmitaGarawand do not belong in front of cameras, but have the right to be at their daughter’s bedside.”

Armita’s case has raised concerns that the 16-year-old could suffer the same fate as Mahsa Amini, a 22-year-old woman whose death in a coma last year in the custody of vice squad sparked months of nationwide protest.

The commanders confirmed that the majority of forces under their command refused to confront the people and had rejected orders to fire on civilians (photo: a protest in Istanbul after the death of Mahsa Amini)

150 people have been killed and hundreds injured in the regime’s crackdown on protests

Protests have swept Iran since Amini's death in police custody

Protests have swept Iran since Amini’s death in police custody

Mahsa was visiting the Iranian capital with her family when she was stopped by the special police unit that enforces strict clothing rules for women, including the mandatory headscarf.

Her brother Kiaresh said at the time that while he waited outside the police station for her release, an ambulance drove to the hospital.

He was told she was in a comatose state after suffering a heart attack and a brain attack.

Mahsa later died of her injuries, but Iran denied involvement in her death, claiming she died of multiple organ failure caused by lack of oxygen to the brain.

Nearly 80 people died last September during 11 nights of violent unrest across the country as Iranian citizens called for the death of the current leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, after news of her death spread.