The Iranian Parliament approved a law that toughens sanctions against women who refuse to wear the Islamic veil in public, including up to 10 years in prison, following the repression of protests over the death of a young woman arrested for wearing it incorrectly.   The sanction came four days after the first anniversary of the death of Masha Amini, a 22-year-old woman of Kurdish ethnicity who died while in a hospital to which she had been taken by the Police after decompensating in a Tehran police station.   Suspicions that she was beaten to death by police sparked a wave of protests in the strongly conservative country, which is governed by unelected Islamic clerics and has a strict dress code requiring women to cover their bodies.   With 152 votes in favor, 34 against and seven abstentions, Iranian deputies approved the law "Support for the culture of chastity and the veil", which had been discussed for several months and had been questioned by the UN, the agency reported. AFP news.   The legislation provides for financial sanctions for "promoting nudity" or "mocking the veil" in the media and social networks, as well as fines and bans on leaving the country for owners of companies whose employees do not wear veils.