BERLIN, March 3 — Germany said today the circumstances surrounding the poisoning of hundreds of schoolgirls in Iran should be fully investigated by authorities.

Hundreds of cases of respiratory distress have been reported in the past three months among schoolgirls in what one Iranian government official said could be an attempt to force the closure of girls’ schools in the Islamic republic.

“The reports of schoolgirls being poisoned in Iran are shocking,” Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock said on Twitter.

At least 10 girls’ schools were targeted in the latest suspected attacks on Wednesday, seven in the northwestern city of Ardabil and three in the capital Tehran.

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“Girls must be able to go to school without fear — whether in Tehran or Ardabil. This is nothing less than their human right,” Baerbock said.

“All the cases must be fully investigated,” she said.

Since the outbreak of the mysterious poisonings in November, almost 1,200 students have required hospital treatment for breathing difficulties, an Iranian lawmaker said Wednesday.

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The poisonings have provoked a wave of anger across the country, with critics denouncing official silence in the face of the growing number of schools reportedly being targeted.

Relations between Germany and Iran have been particularly strained following the wave of protest that erupted over the death of 22-year-old Mahsa Amini in September last year.

Baerbock herself has been at the forefront of Western voices condemning Tehran’s bloody crackdown on demonstrations and its executions of anti-government protesters.

Meanwhile, Tehran on Thursday expelled two German diplomats in a tit-for-tat move after Berlin took similar action in response to a death sentence handed down against German-Iranian dual national, Jamshid Sharmahd. — AFP