This was published 3 months ago
Iran resorts to new tactics to enforce mandatory hijab for women
By Miriam Berger
Iranian authorities plan to prosecute people who encourage women to remove their headscarves and have installed cameras in public places and on highways to catch violators of the country’s strict dress code, according to local media and a senior judicial official.
As part of the effort to step up enforcement, police sent thousands of messages to businesses and car owners warning them to comply, a spokesman told state media.
Iran’s police chief announced last week that the cameras would be installed, saying women caught without a headscarf – or hijab – would first be warned and then face unspecified charges. Additional cameras, including on roadways, were installed Saturday, local media reported.
The country’s deputy attorney-general also warned on Saturday prosecutors would charge those who urge women to take off the veil, which is compulsory in Iran.
“The punishment for the crime of promoting and encouraging others to remove the hijab is much heavier than the crime of removing the hijab itself,” Ali Jamadi said, according to the Mehr news agency, adding that it was a clear example of “encouraging corruption”, a crime in the Islamic Republic.
He did not say what the punishment would be, only that the offence would “be dealt with in the criminal court whose decisions are final” and not subject to appeal.
The moves are part of a wider crackdown on women who have flouted the law on dressing conservatively, and follow a months-long protest movement started in part by the death in September of 22-year-old Mahsa Amini, who was detained by morality police in Tehran for alleged violations of the dress code. She died in police custody, prompting an outpouring of anger and nationwide demonstrations against Iran’s clerical leaders.
Security forces killed some 500 people in the ensuing crackdown, according to the activist news agency HRANA, and detained more than 20,000. In February, Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, announced a broad amnesty for certain prisoners, and in March, Iran’s judiciary announced that 22,000 people arrested during the protests were pardoned.
But rights activists say the government provided no confirmation that all the detainees were released. To qualify for the amnesty, some protestors had to post bail or sign papers apologising for their alleged crimes, according to rights groups and several recently pardoned prisoners who spoke with the Post.
According to Shiva Nazarahari, an activist who works with an informal network inside Iran known as the Volunteer Committee to Follow-Up on the Situation of Detainees, the pardons were issued in part to ease international and domestic pressure on authorities over the crackdown. They were also announced to help Iran’s already overcrowded prisons cope with the influx of thousands of new detainees, Nazarahari said.
But even as authorities sought to calm the unrest and release some prisoners, they also stepped up enforcement of the mandatory dress code for women, including in schools, on university campuses, at businesses and in public places.
From March 6 to April 5, for example, authorities closed at least 458 businesses – including recreation centres, hotels, and restaurants – because employees or customers were wearing “improper” hijab, according to HRANA.
Earlier this month, a video of a man dumping yoghurt on the heads of a mother and daughter, one without a veil and one whose hair was partially covered, in a shop in the city of Mashhad went viral. In the footage, taken by a security camera, the shop owner is then seen chasing the man out. Prosecutors charged both the man and the two women, the latter for not complying with the conservative dress code, state media reported.
Police spokesman Saeed Montazer al-Mahdi told the state news agency IRNA on Sunday that law enforcement had recorded “hundreds” of cases of unveiled women travelling in cars over the previous 24 hours – and had sent text messages to the vehicles’ registered owners. The report did not say where the alleged violations took place or if the cases were recorded using the new cameras.
Mahdi also said police had closed 137 shops and grocers and 18 restaurants for repeated violations of the religious dress code, and had sent out messages to 3500 businesses warning them to comply.
Earlier in the week, the Mizan News Agency, which is affiliated with Iran’s judiciary, published an announcement reminding the public that under the law, cars are not considered private spaces in which women can remove their hijab.
Mahdi said that those who ignore the initial warning will have their cars impounded.
The Washington Post
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