November 4, 2023; The anniversary of the government murder of 38-year-old Nasrin Qadri from Marivan, one of the victims of the revolutionary uprising of Jin, Jiyan, Azadi in Tehran

10:27 - 5 November 2023

On November 4, 2022, Nasrin Qadri, a 38-year-old resident of Tehran and native of Marivan, was confronted with an attack by security forces to arrest her in her home after being identified during the Tehran protests. She was severely beaten and injured by batons in an attempt to arrest her, and as a result of the severity of her injuries, she became unconscious and died after being transferred to one of Tehran's hospitals.

On November 4, 2022, on the 48th day of the revolutionary uprising of Jin, Jiyan, Azadi, and after the 40th-day ceremony of the government's assassination of Jina-Mahsa Amini, the protests turned into a major turning point, and most cities in Kurdistan and Iran entered a widespread phase of protests. The Islamic Republic, which had suppressed the protests severely from the first days, took the life of Nasrin Qadri on the 48th day of the protests and had committed the government's assassination of 55 Kurdish citizens since the beginning of the protests in Kurdistan.

Kurdpa has briefly looked at the way Nasrin Qadri was killed on the anniversary of her government's assassination. She is one of the victims of the revolutionary uprising of Jin, Jiyan, Azadi, in Tehran.

Tehran / Nasrin Qadri, 38, was assassinated by the government

On November 4, 2022, Nasrin Qadri, a 38-year-old resident of Tehran and native of Marivan, was confronted with an attack by security forces to arrest her after being identified during the Tehran protests. She was severely beaten and injured by batons in an attempt to arrest her in her home, and as a result of the severity of her injuries, she became unconscious and died after being transferred to one of Tehran's hospitals.

On the same day, her parents went to Tehran. They were in shock and the only thing they wanted to see at that moment was their daughter. However, Nasrin had already been shrouded, and the only thing her family was allowed to see was her face. The officers, who had a gun in one hand and a microphone in the other, told them that they would return the body only if her father admitted that she had a terminal illness and died of it, otherwise, they would bury the body elsewhere. They accepted only with the aim of at least retrieving the lifeless body of their daughter.

Following Nasrin's death, her brother was afraid that her body would be stolen. He was taken to the cemetery in Marivan at 6 a.m. on Monday, November 5th, with an ambulance, but escorted by a special unit car with strict security measures.

In 2010, Nasrin Qadri was also imprisoned for a week and was released on bail of 100 million tomans due to a conflict with the Morality Police. She was also banned from leaving the country.

Nasrin Qadri studied philosophy at Allameh Tabatabai University in Tehran in 2003 and has lived in Tehran since then.

She was interested in music and reading and also writing, but never published her writings. However, she wrote on her page about the Jin, Jiyan, Azadi protests.

Her relatives say that she was a calm and always different girl and fought against the norms.