Los Angeles, Oct 5 (IANS): More than 50 French female artists from the worlds of cinema and music have symbolically cut their hair in a video campaign showing support for the ongoing protests in Iran calling for more freedom for women following the death of 22-year-old Mahsa Amini, reports 'Deadline'.
French actresses Isabelle Adjani, Berenice Bejo, Juliette Binoche, Laure Calamy, Marion Cotillard, Julie Gayet, Charlotte Gainsbourg, Isabelle Huppert and Alexandra Lamy were among those sharing images of themselves cutting off their hair.
According to 'Deadline', Amini died in police custody on September 16 after being arrested for not wearing her hijab properly in accordance with the country's strict religious laws and allowing some locks of hair to escape.
Police say she died of a heart attack but eyewitnesses and people who were detained with the young woman said she was severely beaten. 'Deadline' further states that women around the world have been cutting a lock of hair and posting the act on social networks around the world in recent days in a sign of solidarity for Iranian women.
The video, with the hashtag #HairForFreedom, was posted on Instagram early on Wednesday morning.
'Deadline' further states that Binoche kicks off the video, holding her hair up high and then shearing a sizable chunk off, declaring "For Freedoma in English.
The video ends with an image by French-Iranian artist and director Marjane Satrapi, who tackled the issue of women's rights in Iran in her award-winning graphic novel and feature adaptation Persepolis.
"Since Mahsa's death on September 16, the Iranian people, led by women, have been protesting at the risk of their lives. These people only hope for access to the most essential freedoms. These women, these men, are asking for our support," read a statement accompanying the video.
"Their courage and dignity oblige us (to act). It is impossible not to denounce again and again this terrible repression. There have been dozens of deaths, including children. The arrests are swelling the number of prisoners already illegally held and too often tortured. We decided to answer the call that was thrown at us by cutting some of these locks (sic)."
The initiative was instigated by international human rights lawyer Richard Sedillot in cooperation with top French barristers Julie Couturier and Christiane Feral Schuhl.