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Iran prof sacked for 'insulting veiled woman'

Nureddin Zarrinkelk 'insulted' the female student at Tehran University by questioning why she wore the full Islamic chador covering.

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TEHRAN: A prominent Iranian professor has been sacked for offending a fully veiled woman during class amid mounting protests at a prestigious Iranian university over insults to Islam.   

Media reports said that Nureddin Zarrinkelk, a professor of fine art known as the father of Iranian animation, "insulted" the female student at Tehran University by questioning why she wore the full Islamic chador covering.   

The incident then sparked more protests at another Tehran university, Amir Kabir, that has already been the scene of demonstrations related to the publication of caricatures deemed offensive to Islam.   

"The father of Iranian animation was expelled from university and cannot teach in any university because of his insult towards the hijab of a university student," the reformist Etemad daily reported.   

It quoted Science Minister Mohammad-Mehdi Zahedi as saying that Zarrinkelk was expelled from Tehran University for "insulting the Islamic hijab" and has been banned from teaching in any university.   

According to the Etemad reports, the incident was sparked during a classroom discussion over an image of a bald angel drawn by a student when the professor asked the woman if she wore the full veil because she herself was bald.   

The ultra-conservative daily Hezbollah published a picture of a demonstration at Amir Kabir Sunday over the incident, fuming against "the shameless professor who has insulted the dignity of a covered woman."   

The reformist Aftab Yazd said that students from several universities assembled for the protests, bearing banners that urged Zahedi to act against such actions or resign.   

These protests appeared to take place alongside the latest demonstrations at Amir Kabir against the caricatures that were published in publications apparently belonging to the student reformist movement.   

The reformist students have said the images were planted as a plot against their knowledge but this has not prevented the arrest of two editors accused of insulting Islam.   

The hardline Kayhan daily said that hundreds of students from all over the country converged on Amir Kabir on Sunday to continue their protests against the images in the newspapers   

It was not clear exactly what the reportedly offensive material contained.   

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