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How Canadian doctors are helping Iranian colleagues document brutality of regime

As Iran executed a second anti-regime demonstrator in a week, protests continued inside the country unabated. Medical professionals, who are among those facing the greatest personal risk, are being helped by colleagues overseas, including Canada.

Doctors around the world are banding together to catalogue protesters' injuries

Iran regimes brutality documented by network of doctors

2 years ago
Duration 3:22
WARNING: Graphic content. Medical professionals inside and outside Iran have created a network to document the terrible injuries inflicted on protesters by Irans security forces that might otherwise go unwitnessed due to Irans strict censorship laws.

WARNING: This story contains graphic images of injury.

As the Iranian government continues to crack down on its opponents even executing two protesters in the past week doctors inside and outside of the country are joining together to document horrific injuries inflicted by the regime.

"The number of people who oppose the regime is very big perhaps more than 80 per centor 90 per centof my colleagues," said a trauma doctor in Iran who has been treating ghastly injuries inflicted on protesters by the regime's security forces.

CBC News has agreed not to identify him or reveal any other details about his work,as doing so could compromise his safety.

"I have seen injuries on the legs,hips and face resulting from shotgun pellets," he said in an interview.

"There have been several cases where they hit them in the forehead and there was one case in our hospital where a young child was shot in the face and lost both of his eyes."

A woman with blond hair hanging down over her back, standing in front of a burning tire and a line of cars, raises her right hand in the air with two fingers in a V.
In this photo taken by an individual not employed by The Associated Press and obtained by the AP outside Iran, Iranians protest the Sept. 16 death of 22-year-old Mahsa Amini after she was detained by the morality police, in Tehran on Oct. 1, 2022. (The Associated Press)

The country's Islamic regime has been shaken by three months of street demonstrations and protests ignited by the Sept. 16 death of MahsaAmini.

The 22-year-old woman died in custody in Tehran after she was arrested by the country's morality police for not properly wearing a hijab,which is mandatory under Iran's Islamic law.

'Yes, we are at risk'

Amini's death attributed to police brutality based on leaked medical scans has triggered widespread street demonstrations and other acts of protest that are ongoing.

Two protesters have been executed by the regime in the past week after widely discredited trials where the young men were denied proper legal representationand executed without the chance of an appeal.

Amnesty International says it identified a further 20 people at risk of execution because of their links to the protests.

"I think it will turn into a revolution," said the doctor,who believes despite the horrendous consequences of challenging the regime, people will continue to bravely resist.

A mobile phone in Cyprus displays a Twitter post on Monday about the execution announced by Iranian authorities of Majidreza Rahnavard, the second person linked to nearly three months of protests who has been executed. (AFP/Getty Images)

But for Iranian doctors,treating government opponents injured by security forces is dangerous by itself.

"I treated patients who were injured and shot and needed to have the bullets removed in my clinic and that caused my office to receive a call from a'private' or 'unknown' number that means it's a call from the intelligence services," he told CBC News.

"So yes, we are at risk."

In late October,hundreds of medical professionals who were protesting outside the medical council of Iran were shot in their backs and legs after security services opened fire on them with shotguns.

Doctors in Iran sharedetails of injuries

Getting even basic information out of the country has been difficult, as authorities have attempted to disrupt messaging service platforms such as WhatsApp and Telegram.

Despite that, doctors who have treated patients have still managed to share details of the injuries they've been seeing with colleagues outside of the country,including doctors in Canada.

"We try to be their voice," said Dr. Saeed Zavareh, a Vancouver internal medicine specialist,who tries to stay in contact with colleagues inside Iran.

Wounds from pellets fired at a protester in Iran by security forces are shown in this photo sent to Dr. Kayvan Mirhadi, an Iranian American physician practising in New York state. (Submitted by Dr. Kayvan Mirhadi)

Zavareh,53, trained in Iran as a doctor and immigrated to Canada just over 20 years ago.

In the last few months, he said, doctors in Iran have sent him hundreds of scans of patients,many showing ghastly injuries inflicted by the country's security forces.

"I have seen eye injuries more than 50 and that's only me.In the United States, they have a big database that has around 1,000 cases reported,"Zavareh told CBC News.

During previous uprisings in Iran, such as in 2019,security services killed more than 1,500 people, but this time the tactics are different, Zavareh said.

He believes the aim is to leave people grossly disfigured to dissuade others from taking to the streets.

"Imagine a teenager losing both eyes and walking in your neighbourhood every day it's part of the traumatization,part of creating horror for the whole neighbourhood that this is your future if you come to protest."

Zavarehsaid that in some cases, he has been able to offer diagnostic or treatment advice based on the photos or body scans of those injured.

On other occasions,he said, Canadian and overseas doctors have been able to send packages through the mail containing supplies, medicine and surgical instruments so that doctors in Iran can set up treatment centres in their own homes rather than work in their clinics.

"They try to make it such a scary place so no one even goes outside that's the horror terrorizing people who don't want [anything] more than freedom."

Doctors and other medical professionals in London demonstrate on Friday against the Iranian regime in a show of solidarity for their colleagues in Iran. (Submitted by Dr. Nader Fallah)

But more often than not,Zavareh said,the most important thing that foreign doctors can do is catalogue the injuries inflicted on regime opponents and collect evidence.

"Every piece of information that comes from Iran is priceless for us.We need more evidence when we want to go ahead and file a case in [an] international court for crimes against humanity," he said.

Concerns for Iranian doctor sentenced to death

The challenges and dangers facing Iranian doctors have been recognized by medical associations across Europe and in North America.

In mid-November, the Canadian Medical Association released a statement calling on Iranian authorities to let doctors do their jobs without interference.

The British Medical Association released a similar statement last week,calling on authorities to "cease persecution of health professionals" who treat those injured by security forces.

Wounds inflicted on a protester in Iran by the country's security forces are shown in this photo sent to Dr. Kayvan Mirhadi, an Iranian American physician practising in New York state. (Submitted by Dr. Kayvan Mirhadi)

"We have had examples of doctors in Iran who have treated protesters and been rushed away to be interrogated themselves and actually punished," Dr. Raanan Gillon, past-president of the BMA, told CBC News in London.

One of the highest-profile and most worrying cases involves Dr.Hamid Ghareh Hassanlou,an Iranian radiologist who was tortured by police and sentenced to death.

Iranian authorities accuse him of being part of a mob that attacked and killed two members of a government militia,but his colleagues say the alleged confessions are fraudulent and were obtained under duress.

"We are now working to save his life," said Zavareh,the Vancouver internal medicine specialist,explaining that he has reached out to medical groups around the world and key figures at the United Nations.

"We heard that they are planning to execute him faster than we can [help] him."

The international networks helping Iranian doctors have grown quickly. In some cases,medical professionals are working through their medical associations or physician colleges,while other associations are more informal.

Iranian regime appears unmoved

British dentist Dr. Nader Fallah, who lives just outside London, has been organizing demonstrations and travelling across Europe to pressure governments to impose even harsher international penalties on the Iranian regime.

"The frustration is that we live outside Iran. Initially we felt powerless to help, but in a very quick period of time we have organized multiple associations and groups that hold rallies throughout the world," Fallahsaidin an interview near Watford, England, where he was seeing patients.

A picture obtained by AFP outside Iran shows shows a demonstrator raising his arms and makes the victory sign during a protest for Mahsa Amini, a woman who died after being arrested by the Islamic republic's
A picture obtained by AFP outside Iran shows a demonstrator raising his arms and making the victory sign during a protest over the death of Amini, in Tehran on Sept. 19. (AFP/Getty Images)

While Fallah saidhe accepts that the support the outside medical community can provide to Iranian doctors is limited,he believes by documenting the abuses and acting as a conduit for doctors inside the country,pressure on the Iranian regime can be sustained.

"The more we become the voice of Iran and with the atrocities against humanity we find there is more action from European allies[governments]and friends."

The Iranian regime,however, appears unmoved by the foreign support for the protesters and has brushed aside the widespread condemnation.

Earlier this week, Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi vowed to continue cracking down on protesters.

Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi meets with the families of security forces killed during protests against the regime, in Tehran on Friday. (Iran Presidential Website/WANA)

"The identification, trial and punishment of the perpetrators of the martyrdom [killing]of security forces will be pursued with determination," he was quoted as saying by Reuters.

Still, the doctor interviewed by CBC News in Iran said he believes the support from Canada, Britain and beyond is vital and will continue to be going forward.

"The fear to voice your opposition has resulted in this regime remaining in power for too long. I think this fear is dissipating," he said.

"Every day, the number of people expressing their opposition and who are brave enough to do so is increasing."