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Posted: 2022-10-12 20:28:49

Arezou remembers the incident like it was yesterday: walking to work as a teacher in Tehran, Iran's capital, she was stopped.

It was the morality police. Her clothes were "too tight", showing off her "body shape".

She was asked to go into a van, but she refused, so they pushed her in. 

"In the police station, I asked, 'why did you arrest me?" Arezou told the ABC. "I said, 'I did nothing wrong, I'm a human being, I have the right to choose my clothes'. 

"They called in the person in charge, he got close to me, so close I could smell his breath, and he told me, 'would you like me to take you underground and show you what we do with women who talk like you'?"

An Iranian woman up close
Arezou remebers being interrogated by the morality police.(ABC News: Brendan Esposito)

Azadeh, now 42, has a similar story. 

"I was in the street, I was told I had the wrong dress on," she said. "They take girls [into the station] they hit them and they scream at them.

"One time, I was at party and the police came in to check if any alcohol was in there. Men and women aren't allowed to mix so everyone there ran away. It was a children's party."

A woman making a sign.
Azedeh says Iran's morality police are known for their beatings.(ABC News: Patrick Stone )

'I'm scared of the Iranian government'

For both women, now safe in Australia after escaping Iran almost a decade ago, run-ins with Iran's notorious morality police were common — so common it was just part of life.  

But that all changed with Mahsa Amini, a 22-year-old woman who died in custody last month after being detained by the morality police.

Her death sparked widespread protests in Iran, with the latest this week spreading to the country's vital petroleum sector.

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