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- Two Prisoners Executed For Espionage in Tehran
- Imprisoned Dervish Transferred to Hospital after Heart Attack - Seven prisoners Were Hanged In Northern Iran - Three Prisoners Were Hanged In Central Iran - Dervish Issued Harsh Sentence to Intimidate Others - 2 Christians are arrested in Tehran
- CIA head visits Israel to discuss Syria, Iran's nuclear program
- US targets Iran rial, gold imports in sanctions pressure - Israel air strike on Syria 'is a message to Iran and the US' - Israel Will Strike Iran 's Subterranean Nuclear Sites - Iran, not Israel, faces an existential threat, says top US analyst - Oil-rich Emirates a key part of defense against Iran
- Religious leaders ban 30 women from running for Iran's presidency
- Iranian cleric: Women can't be president in Iran - Iranians marrying foreigners without state consent face prosecution - More women smuggling drugs out of Iran - Canada’s High Court could try Iran for Zahra Kazemi murder - "Hole"/ Saba Vasefi
- When it comes to Syria and Hezbollah, Israel is walking a tightrope
- IRGC: World now eying Iranian regime's resistance - Two Iranians in Kenya found guilty of bomb plots - Iran develops rocket-launcher submarine, smart ships - Iran to unveil indigenous ballistic, cruise missiles - Why Iran Is Trying to Save the Syrian Regime |
Wednesday 30 May 2012Women targeted in Iran clothing crackdown
Al Arabiya - Female booth attendants at an international trade fair and shops selling men’s ties have become targets in a strict crackdown by Tehran police on clothing deemed un-Islamic, Iranian media reported on Wednesday. Women “not properly observing the hijab,” or the Islamic headscarf, as they staffed stands at an international food exhibition, prompted police to shut down 80 of the booths, Iranian deputy police chief Ahmad Reza Radan was quoted as saying in the Mardomsalari newspaper. His boss, police chief Esmail Ahmadi Moqadam, said the female attendants had been warned, “but they did not take it seriously -- that is why we shut them (the booths) down.” It was not known if the women were fined or arrested, as often happens for such offences, nor was it known if any foreigners were among them. The fair, which wrapped up on Wednesday, hosted exhibitions by companies from several countries, including Austria, China, France, Germany, India, Italy, South Korea, Spain and Turkey. According to Mardomsalari and other media, police have also launched a fresh campaign to enforce an often-ignored ban on the sale of ties -- apparel deemed by regime hardliners as a symbol of Western cultural influence rejected since Iran’s 1979 Islamic revolution. “We had to remove all ties from our shop” on the orders of Tehran’s morality police, an unnamed shopkeeper told the ISNA news agency. The ban appeared to be an effort to counter a comeback ties had been making in recent years in Iran, especially in ceremonial events such as weddings and funerals. Tehran police have in recent weeks been zealously cracking down on clothing standards in the street, screening foot and vehicle traffic at major junctions and shopping centers. The move is part of an annual campaign before the sweltering heat of summer, when women try to relax some of their mandatory clothing by opting for thinner, shorter coats and headscarves. Women are required to wear a scarf covering their hair, a long coat to below the knee and to eschew heavy make-up and nail polish. Violators are often arrested and taken to police stations, where they are typically fined and made to sign statements promising to dress properly in the future, though flogging can occur in rare cases. Relatives are usually called to collect them with clothing considered more appropriate. |