Where this photo comes from, mahsa alimardani/TwitterA young woman has died after entering a coma while in detention at the hands of morality police in Iran.Mahsa Amini, who was 22 years old, was arrested and accused by the morality police of beating her for wearing an "improper hijab."Emtedad news website quoted Mahsa's uncle as saying, the 22-year-old died after being taken to hospital after morality police who were trying to enforce Iran's strict hijab rules detained her for their station.State TV confirmed her death for news but did not drop details.Her death has caused people to stop for social media.The interior ministry and Tehran government lawyers launched an investigation into the case after a call from President Ebrahim, state media reported.Where this photo comes from, @mah_sadeghi/TwitterEarlier this week, Mahsa Amini traveled from the Kurdistan province to the country’s capital Tehran to visit her relatives when morality police known as “Gasht-e Ershad” arrested her saying she did not fully cover her head.The police said she “suffered heart problems” for detention, after being taken to the station to "convince and educate," her, but denied allegations that she was beaten.But human rights activists claim Masha was beaten by police officers.“Tehran police announced Masha Amini 'suddenly suffered from a heart attack' – as if a 22-year-old woman had just suffered a heart attack that caused her to coma and disfigure her naturally.Iranian media publishes this nonsense as fact,” Mahsa Alimardani, a digital-rights researcher with human rights organization ARTICLE 19, wrote on Twitter.Over the past few months, Iranian rights activists are urging women to remove their veils in public, risking arrest as per their failure to follow Islamic dress code as the country's diehard leaders crack down hard on what they describe as "immoral." behaviour.As they gingered people to run anti-hijab protests, videos posted on social media showed cases of what amounted to rough handling actions by morality police units against women who removed their hijabs.On Friday, honest reformist politician Mahmoud Sadeghi, a former lawmaker, asked Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei to speak out over the Amini case."What does the Supreme Leader, who rightly condemned US police over the death of George Floyd, say about Iranian police treatment of Mahsa Amini?," Sadeghi said on Twitter.For 2020, Khamenei said killing George Floyd for police custody exposed the "true nature" of US rulers.Under Iranian Sharia (Islamic) law, imposed after the 1979 revolution, women are obliged to cover their hair and wear long, loose-fitting clothes to hide their shape.Women who break this law face condemnation from the public, chop fines or arrest.Years after the revolution, religious rulers still struggle to enforce the law, with many women of all ages and backgrounds wearing tight-fitting, thigh-length coats and brightly colored scarves that were pushed back to expose plenty of hair.© 2022 BBC.External site does not concern BBC.The way we are taking to external link.