The poisoning cases began two months after the start of a protest movement in Iran sparked by the September 16 death in custody of Mahsa Amini, 22, following her arrest for allegedly violating the strict dress code for women.
Dozens of schoolgirls were poisoned Saturday in several schools across Iran, local media reported, in continuation of the mysterious phenomenon that has shaken the country for months.
Since late November, many schools, mostly for girls, have been affected by sudden poisoning incidents from gases or toxic substances, in some cases causing fainting and hospitalisation among the students.
At least â60 students were poisoned in a girlsâ school in the town of Haftkelâ in the oil-rich southwestern province of Khuzestan, state televisionâs IRIB news agency cited a local official as saying.
A number of schoolgirls were poisoned in âfive schools in Ardabil in the northwestâ, where the victims showed symptoms of âanxiety, shortness of breath and headachesâ, a provincial medical official told the news agency.
In the northwestern town of Urmia, capital of West Azerbaijan province, âa number of schoolgirls were taken to hospital on Saturday after feeling sickâ, ILNA news agency reported without further elaboration.
According to an official count provided on March 7, âmore than 5,000 studentsâ have been affected by similar poisonings in more than 230 establishments, located in 25 of the countryâs 31 provinces.
On Friday MP Hamidreza Kazemi, the head of the national fact-finding committee formed to investigate these cases, specified that âthe final reportâ would be published âin two weeksâ.
âWe have received reports from various bodies and we are studying the issue in order to present our conclusion to parliament,â he was quoted as saying by state television.
Iranâs Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei had called on March 6 for âsevere sentencesâ up to the death penalty against those found responsible for the poisonings, which he described as âunforgivable crimesâ.
The poisoning cases began two months after the start of a protest movement in Iran sparked by the September 16 death in custody of Mahsa Amini, 22, following her arrest for allegedly violating the strict dress code for women.
AFP