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Clothing crackdown in Iran

Posted: Tuesday, May 01, 2007 1:48 PM
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"Things are starting to feel like the old days again," said a cautiously dressed woman in her early 30’s doing some grocery shopping on Valiasr Street, Tehran’s main thoroughfare. "I am very careful about what I wear these days. The police are arresting woman all over the city for what they think is immoral clothing."

"I don’t like to wear the heavy clothing I have on now, especially as it’s almost summer. I hope this doesn’t last," she added.

Under the previous leadership of reformist President Mohammad Khatami, women started to enjoy some freedom about how they could dress. "Moral codes" loosened - allowing woman to show more hair under their headscarves and some flexibility in the style of the "montos" or gowns they wore.  

Over time women began sporting outlandish hairstyles under their headscarves, putting on heavy make-up and wearing shorter and tighter montos.

An Iranian woman shows off a bit of her own personal style in Tehran. NBC News/ Ali Arouzi.

But when President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad came to power in 2005, there were warnings that strict Islamic codes would be reinforced. Nothing really came of the warnings and commentators predicted that Ahmadinejad’s rhetoric was just hot air. Many believed it was too late to roll back social reforms – especially in Tehran.

But the mood on the streets has changed dramatically in recent days. Thousands of Iranian women have been cautioned about their dress and many more have been arrested in the capital in the fiercest crackdown on what's known as "bad hijab" since the mid-1990’s.

Morality police at the mall
The morality police, who enforce dress codes, are stationed outside shopping malls and crowded streets, warning pedestrians and drivers if they are showing too much hair or wearing clothes that are too tight. If people argue with them, they are shown to a police van and taken to the police station. And shops showcasing what are deemed racy window displays also have been shuttered.

"The police came to my shop, took a look at the clothes we sell and warned me not sell anything that was tight or revealing," said the owner of an upscale boutique in the north of Tehran. "Imagine that? Telling people what they can and can’t wear? This is going to hurt business, everyone will be dressed the same again." 

Adding to concerns, enforcement of the dress codes has now been assigned to the Basij, a hard-line government-backed militia.

Iranian women don't let government restrictions on their dress curb their fun. NBC News/ Ali Arouzi.

Men targeted, too
The young and trendy men of Tehran - who have embraced a wild, heavily gelled, spiky hairstyle known as the "Rooster" – also have been targeted in the recent clampdown. Police have warned barber shops not to give men Western-style haircuts or pluck customers eyebrows.

"It’s so difficult living like this," said Milad, a young man in his early 20’s, as he walked out of a barber shop, sporting the "Rooster" hairstyle.

"I remember when my brother was a teenager and I was still a young boy, he came home one day wearing a t-shirt and his forearms had been painted black. My mother asked him what happened and he explained that the morality police had detained him because he was wearing a short-sleeved shirt. As punishment, the section of his arms that were exposed were painted," said Milad. "That was over 10 years ago and he still wears t-shirts and I will still wear my hair like this."

Some say the recent crackdown is simply a ruse by the government to deflect attention from more pressing issues – like the heightened cost of living in Iran, rising gas prices, and tensions with the international community over the nuclear issue.

If that is indeed the government’s strategy, it risks widening the ever-increasing gulf between themselves and ordinary Iranians in the process.

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Comments

iran is abosolutely absurd, ridiculous, and out of control. if the people of iran had any smarts, they (as many of them as there are) could go in the government offices and completely overthrow the bas*****!!! there is SO many of those people over there that they could stand up for themselves if they wanted to. turn it around and make that wacko leader of theirs wear all that heavy clothing in that 100 degree weather. personally i'd rather be dead than to live in that h*** hole. i feel bad for some of those people over there. i'm sure some of them are nice people. it's a shame. Ashley mckinney morristown, tn
I think "HIJAB" in Islam women( covering their faces and their private parts) is absolutely important for all the Muslims women around the world. I fact this is the mandatory in Muslim religion for protection. There is no business of any western countries to interfear in this issue.!!!
I am amused that ismail the fanatic actually has been permitted to live in America this is what liberal Western immigration policies do to us. We are beginning to import this crap to our countries.
No matter what people say. Make sure that a Muslim is a Muslim one who follows The QURAN and His Porphets. One who goes against Quran and Porphets words they straight go to Hell. Make the best for ur Graves and hearafter.
Those who think that woman does not have any rights in islam pleas read Sura 'NISA' from Quran.
I know you are just kids now saying all these things against women in Hijab.

You will never know until you get married and you have your own children (GIRLS). What if when they grow up and dont listen to you as you dont listen to your parents now waring Hijab.

This is to protect the world against all Odds (AIDS,....etc).

If you c the western world now you will c 4 to 5 men sleeping with 1 woman. What if this turns us side of life....?


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