There is another woman victim of the anti-veil protests that shake the squares of the main cities of Iran by day and by night, 10 days after the death of the Kurdish girl Masha Amini.

It is Hadis Najafi, 20, blond hair and ponytail, allegedly killed by the Iranian security forces last night during the protests in the city of Karaj, near Tehran. 

According to news spread on social media, the girl was hit by six bullet shots that hit her in the chest, face and neck.

That "girl with a tail" had become a symbol of the anti-veil protests, which threaten the government of

Ayatollah Khamenei and the "moral police"

.

In a video, which went viral, she was seen tying her hair with a rubber band, without the hijab, before facing the square because she was opposed to the mandatory use of the veil and the discriminatory laws of women's rights in the Islamic Republic of Shiite majority. 

That gesture common to many Western girls, done every day, but which in Iran can be paid for with one's life.

Also from social networks, in particular that of the activist Masih Alinejad, there are news of reprisals and hundreds of preventive arrests by the Iranian moral police, over 700, among them obviously many women who bravely challenge the repression.

Hard punch requested by President Raisi, with the police he would be shooting at eye level.

There have been about fifty victims so far, including

4 children , according to

Amnesty international .

And not just women, there are also many men, and students, who react to oppression by cutting off their beards and hair as a sign of solidarity with their fellow street mates. 

The Pasdaran, the Revolutionary Guards (Irgc), are chasing a very popular figure, an icon of football, siding with the ongoing protests in the country.

Ali Karimi

, former captain of the Iranian national football team, used his online supporter base (11.6 million followers on Instagram) to raise awareness of the cause of the thousands of protesters.

"Our children are dying as the children of the regime's officials leave Iran, but those who remain risk death," he writes. 

Reuters reported that the Iranian Foreign Ministry summoned the

British and Norwegian Ambassadors to Tehran

on Saturday over the "hostile nature" of the London-based media coverage of the riots.

Meanwhile, the main Iranian reformist party has urged the state to

lift the obligation of the veil

.

The People's Union of Islamic Iran, which is linked to the entourage of former reformist president Mohammad Khatami, has asked the authorities to prepare "the legal elements" that pave the way for the "cancellation of the mandatory hijab law".

The group, which is not in power, also asks that the Islamic Republic officially announce "the

end of the activities of the moral police"

and "authorize peaceful demonstrations".

And yet an Iranian girl sings the song " Bella ciao" in Persian

on social networks

.

The video released on

Twitter

becomes a hymn to the resistance of the Iranian people.

Iranian director Oscar winner for "The Client" and "A separation"

Asghar Farhadi,

launches a video appeal to the international community "let's mobilize for the people of Iran, women will lead the change", he writes.