When Iranian girls go out these days, their friends warn them they face trouble if they are wearing makeup or are fashionably dressed. Their friends point out that they have a 1,000-dollar price tag on their heads. They would do well to heed such advice, because the Iranian police launched a new drive a few weeks ago to crack down on anyone deemed to be wearing “bad hejab” or to be flouting the rules of chaste behaviour in other ways. The campaign is being called the “new approach to moral security”.
An announcement by the chief prosecutor for the eastern city of Mashhad, Mahmoud Zoghi, made it clear that the Iranian national authorities had raised the fine for incorrect hejab from the equivalent of 50 US dollars up to 1,300. The fine applies not only to women, but also to men found to be in violation of public decencyThe hejab campaign is nothing new; in fact the authorities mount similar crackdowns every year as the start of summer tempts people to appear in their finery.Yet this year, it has come as something of a shock. In the mass unrest that ensued the disputed presidential election of June last year, the authorities seemed to set their hejab obsession to one side because they had bigger fish to fry. Some saw the respite as a kind of concession – you let us continue running the country, and we will ease up on some restrictions. (See Iran: Pursuit of Morality Serves Political Aims)No longer. About a month ago, Interior Minister Mostafa Mohammad-Najjar, who is also deputy commander-in-chief of the police, spelled out that the force was back on the job. They had let up for a while, he said, because they were otherwise engaged because of the post-election “sedition”.
Iran's Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, gave the reinvigorated “bad hejab” campaign the green light at a meeting with senior police officers on April 25 during which he asked them to “deal harshly with corruption in society”.“Those who, either deliberately or through ignorance, sully the face of society of religion, chastity and virtue must be dealt with effectively and correctly,” said Khamenei.Following Khamenei's remarks, government officials announced plans to dust down the long-forgotten “hejab and chastity culture initiative”.
Developed in 2003, when Mohammad Khatami was president, it envisaged measures to instill “correct behaviour” throughout society, not just in public places.The initiative was never pursued under Khatami, nor was it enacted during Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's first four-year term as president.The Supreme Leader's comments triggered a concerted response from the clergy, particularly from Friday Prayer leaders across the country, who began using their sermons to bemoan the poor observance of hejab regulations and the Islamic restrictions on interaction between the sexes. The prayer leaders are told what the subject of their weekly sermons should be by a policy-making council which operates under the Supreme Leader.The most widely-reported remarks on the subject came from Kazem Seddighi, the Friday Prayers leader for Tehran who declared on April 16 that earthquakes were caused by women who did not wear the proper hejab.In similar vein, Mohammad-Taqi Rahbar, who heads the clerical faction in parliament, asked, “what part of those ten-centimetre headscarves that some women throw on, with their hair showing, or the tight-fitting outfits that they wear like dancers or Hollywood actresses, bears a resemblance to Islamic hejab?
It was after statements of this kind that Interior Minister Mohammad-Najjar announced plans to enforce the hejab and chastity initiative.On May 9, a majority of 236 out of the 290 Majlis members demanded that the interior ministry and police force use all their resources to crack down on social and moral corruption and enforce hejab and chastity in Islamic society. Demonstrations were staged across the country in support of the initiative, attended by schoolchildren and students from the Basiji movement.At least 27 government agencies are to work together to enforce the hejab and chastity initiative. A new organisation called the “council for a strategy on upholding virtue and prohibiting vice” is to be established. Its head will be appointed by and answerable to the Supreme Leader.Thus, those radical forces which have been demanding the creation of a “ministry of virtue” for years will finally see their dream come true.The initiative will even be enforced in kindergartens. The interior minister has ruled that children will only be allowed to play games that are religiously correct and in tune with Islamic culture. They will no longer be taught to dance. It has also been proposed that the 14,000 privately-run kindergartens across the country should be taken over by the state.In the schools, pupils will be instructed in correct dress codes and permissible interaction between the sexes.
There will be incentive schemes modeled on the recent prize-giving ceremony in West Azarbaijan provincem where schoolgirls aged from seven to 14 were given certificates of merit and gifts for observing proper hejab.Women working for public-sector organisations will be subject to a uniform dress code, while the labour ministry has been instructed to inform private firms about the proper dress code, rules about makeup and male-female interaction their employees should observe.The same goes for universities. Ayatollah Ahmad Jannati, secretary of the Guardian Council, has given a Friday Prayers sermon demanding that students who flout the hejab rules should be failed on tests.Jalil Dara, head of cultural affairs at the science ministry, has said all universities must impose a common policy on hejab. However, at the moment each institution seems to be making up its own rules.For instance, Shiraz University of Medicine has circulated a 23-point directive detailing the correct dress code for its students. According to these rules, men must wear loose, long-sleeved shirts and women must have their “manteau” coats completely buttoned up at all times. With the exception of wedding bands, all gold rings and bracelets are banned for both sexes. Fingernails must be kept short, clean and free of nail polish. Shoes must not have high heels or pointed toes. Chewing gum in class and laughing out loud in public places are also prohibited.
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