Security agents raid the home of Shahnaz Akmal, one of Dadkhah's mothers

Shahnaz Akmali, the mother of Mustafa Karimbeigi, one of those killed in the 2009 protests, has reported that security agents raided her home, searched it, and confiscated all of her electronic devices. Her daughter has also been summoned to the prosecutor's office on undisclosed charges.
Civil activist Shahnaz Akmalli says security agents raided their home on Monday, February 21, and confiscated all electronic devices and took them away.
Akmal, the mother of Mustafa Karimbeigi, one of the victims of the 2009 protests and one of the "Mothers of Justice," added in a video posted on social media: "The security agents, who included four men and one woman, searched and ransacked the entire house, and also took away photos of several of the victims of various protests in Iran."
According to Ms. Ekmali, security agents have warned her family that Maryam Karimbeigi, the family's other child, must report to the Evin Prosecutor's Office within five days.
In this video, Akmalli protests against the "harassment" of various security agencies against him and his family members.
In 2017, the Tehran Revolutionary Court sentenced Ms. Ekmali to one year in prison and a ban on online activity.
He was also summoned in January 2019 by the deputy prosecutor of the Evin Court and threatened in the presence of his interrogator that if he did not withdraw the call to hold a commemoration of the 40th anniversary of the deaths of those killed in the November 2019 protests, in addition to the one-year prison sentence that is ready to be executed, he would be sentenced to another ten years in prison on charges of "gathering and collusion, propaganda against the system, and insulting the leadership."
In the same year, Maryam Karimbeigi, Shahnaz Akmali's daughter, was summoned to the Alborz Provincial IRGC Intelligence Service and her mobile phone, car documents, and even her license plate were confiscated.
Shahnaz Akmali and Maryam Karim Beigi, both of whom are seeking revenge for the blood of their son and brother who were killed on Ashura in 2009, have been repeatedly harassed and threatened by the Islamic Republic's security and judicial institutions due to their civic activities, and security cases have been opened against them.
Ms. Akmalli says that this time too, security agents did not mention the charges against her or her daughter.
Source: DW




