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There was an Iranian female athlete who participated in an international sports climbing competition held in Korea without wearing a hijab.

But after that, this player's house turned into ruins.

In addition, an Iranian man who was cheering when the Iranian World Cup team failed to reach the round of 16 was shot and killed by the military and police.



Reporter Kim Soo-hyung reports.



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Household items are scattered in a mess in front of a house whose exterior walls and roof have completely collapsed.



Medals won in sports competitions are also thrown to the floor.



This is the family home of Elnaz Rekabi, who emerged as a hero of Iranian anti-government protesters by competing without wearing a hijab in an international sports climbing competition held in Korea last October.



Local media Iran Wire reported that Iranian police had demolished the house and fined Rekabi's brother $5,000 for violating the law.



Rekabi has been placed under arrest at his father's house since his return, and has been threatened with confiscation of his family's property if he goes abroad or gives interviews to the media, he said.



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In September, after the mysterious death of Mahsa Amini, who was taken away by the police for not wearing a hijab, anti-government protests spread out of control, and the Iranian government continues to crack down hard.



Animosity against the government has grown, and in some areas there have been cheers, honking and honking as Iran's national team lost to the United States in the World Cup.



Mehran Desert, a man cheering for Iran's defeat, was shot and killed by military police.



The Iranian Center for Human Rights says 448 people have been killed at the hands of security forces in anti-government protests that have spread across the country.



(Video editing: Kim Ho-jin)