Categories: Global

Iran issues warning on mandatory headscarf in cars: Media

TEHRAN (AFP): Iranian police have resumed warnings that women must wear mandatory headscarves even in cars, media reported Monday, as unrest continues following the death of Mahsa Amini.

Protests have gripped Iran since the September 16 death of Iranian-Kurdish Amini, 22, after her arrest in Tehran for an alleged breach of the Islamic republic’s strict dress code for women.

Tehran generally calls the protests “riots.”

Fars news agency quoted a senior police officer who said the “new stage” of the Nazer-1 program — “surveillance” in Persian — was being rolled out “across the country by the police.”

The Nazer program, launched in 2020, concerns the “removal of hijab in cars,” Fars added.

When it was launched in 2020, car owners would be sent an SMS text message alerting them of a dress code violation in their vehicle and warning of “legal” action if repeated.

But police have seemingly dropped the threat of legal action, according to messages posted on social media platforms.

“The removal of hijab has been observed in your vehicle: It is necessary to respect the norms of the society and make sure this action is not repeated,” read a message reportedly sent by police and posted on social media.

Iran’s morality police — known as Gasht-e Ershad, or “Guidance Patrol” — have a mandate to enter public areas to check on the implementation of the strict dress code.

Following the protests, numerous women in upmarket districts of the capital Tehran, as well as in more modest and traditional southern suburbs, were observed without a headscarf and without being stopped.

Since September, the morality police’s white and green vans became a much less common sight on the streets of Tehran.

In early December, Iran’s Prosecutor General Mohammad Jafar Montazeri was quoted as saying that the morality police had been closed down.

But campaigners were skeptical about his comments, which appeared to be an impromptu response to a question at a conference, rather than a clearly signposted announcement by the interior ministry which oversees the police.

 

The Frontier Post

Recent Posts

26 nations vow to give Ukraine postwar security guarantees, Macron says

PARIS (Reuters) : Twenty-six nations have pledged to provide postwar security guarantees to Ukraine, which…

4 minutes ago

Judge orders Trump administration to release billions in foreign aid approved by Congress

WASHINGTON (AP): The Trump administration must release billions of dollars in foreign aid approved by…

9 minutes ago

Israeli military says it controls 40 percent of Gaza City

JERUSALEM/CAIRO (Reuters): Israel controls 40 percent of Gaza City, a military spokesperson said on Thursday,…

9 minutes ago

DC sues Trump administration over National Guard deployment

WASHINGTON: Washington, D.C., on Thursday sued the Trump administration over its deployment of hundreds of…

10 minutes ago

New Ebola outbreak in DR Congo kills 15: health minister

KINSHASA (AFP): Health authorities in the Democratic Republic of Congo have declared a new outbreak…

18 minutes ago

Six in UK court deny terror charges for Palestine Action support

LONDON (AFP): Six activists on Thursday denied terror charges for allegedly supporting the banned group…

20 minutes ago

This website uses cookies.