Iran police toughen controls on women without hijab
AFP | Tehran, Iran
The Daily Tribune – www.newsofbahrain.com
Police in Iran announced a new crackdown yesterday on women who ignore the country’s strict Islamic dress code that makes it compulsory for them to wear headscarves in public.
“From today, the police in Tehran, as in other provinces, will implement their measures against this sort of violation of the law regarding hijab,” the capital’s police chief AbbasAli Mohammadian said on live television
Local media reported that police in the city had launched a campaign code named “Noor”, the Persian word for light, in their efforts to double down on those who break the hijab dress code.
The authorities made it mandatory for women to obey the Islamic dress code shortly after the 1979 Islamic revolution that toppled Iran’s shah.
“People who did not pay attention to previous police warnings will be specially warned in the city from today on, and legal action will be taken against them,” Mohammadian said on Saturday.
The crackdown comes just days after supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei in a speech reiterated that women in the Islamic republic must obey the dress code, regardless of their beliefs.
“The hijab issue, which has now become an imposed challenge, did not exist before,” he said, and blamed “the intervention of foreigners”.
Iran’s morality police had kept a low profile since protests erupted following the September 2022 death in custody of Mahsa Amini, a young Kurd who died three days after they arrested her for allegedly violating the dress code in Tehran.
The morality police were never formally abolished by the authorities.
Amini’s death triggered months-long demonstrations which the authorities labelled as “riots” fomented by foreign governments.
On Saturday, Iranian media including Ham Mihan daily posted “images of the presence of patrol vans” from the morality police in central Tehran’s Valiasr Square.
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