Tehran, July 13: Forget the nuclear
inspectors, instability in Iraq or soaring
drugs use. The hot topic in Iran these
days is fashion - what women can and
cannot wear.Morals police and Islamic
vigilantes have launched a fierce
crackdown on “improper dress”, seizing
tight coats and cropped trousers from
fashionable shopping centres and detaining
scores of women every day for flouting the
Islamic dress code.
The code, or Hejab in Persian,
was imposed after the 1979 Islamic
revolution and requires women to cover
their hair and wear long, loose-fitting
clothes to disguise their figures.
Roshanak, 27, was arrested by police
and held for two days when her scarf
slipped off while parking her car.
“My husband had to pay 10 million rials
($1,170) to free me and I am pending
trial. My lawyer said I may be lashed as
well.”
While the crackdown on improper
Hejab is not new - enforcement
typically spikes in the summer as soaring
temperatures prompt many women to test the
boundaries of the law - the level of
debate accompanying it is unprecedented.
According to local media the Interior
Ministry is drafting new guidelines on
Hejab to clarify what can and cannot
be worn.
For many, ruling on the acceptable
length of women's coats or whether sandals
and earrings are banned imperils the tiny
sartorial freedoms women have gained in
recent years.
"The way people dress is a matter for
individuals to decide... the government
cannot approve a Bill like this," the
reformist Sharq newspaper said in
an editorial.
But many clerics, alarmed by the
growing number of women who have cast
aside the traditional head-to-toe black
chador in favour of colourful scarves,
tight coats and calf-length capri pants,
think the proposed Bill comes not a moment
too soon.
"Some women appear in the streets half
a millimetre from breaking the Islamic
dress code," said hardline cleric Ahmad
Khatami. "It is a very dangerous trend."
One senior cleric proposed an anti-vice
ministry similar to that used by the
Taliban to force Afghan women to cover up
and men to grow beards. A hardline
vigilante group has blamed bad Hejab
for rising rape cases and urged police to
stamp it out.

Political analysts say the Hejab
issue may be a litmus test for the future
of social freedoms, particularly now that
Islamic conservatives have all but ousted
reformists from power.
Pro-Reform President Mohammad Khatami,
credited with encouraging more relaxed
enforcement of rules such as Hejab
since his 1997 election, is in his last
year in office. His allies lost their
parliamentary majority to conservatives in
a February vote marred by the mass
disqualification of reformists.
"The moderates in the conservative camp
know that a severe crackdown on social
issues would cause a backlash from people
but the traditionalists want to make an
issue out of Hejab," said political
analyst Hossein Rassam.
Reflecting divisions on how to treat
the issue, many of the dissenting voices
against stricter dress codes come from
within the Islamic conservative camp
itself.

“Any policy for cracking down on those
who violate Hejab which is imposed
by the state will fail,” the conservative
Resalat newspaper said in an
editorial. Even supreme leader Ayatollah
Ali Khamenei, normally a proponent of
strict adherence to Islamic values,
sounded a flexible note in a key speech
last week. “Cultural mimicry is a big
danger, but don't get me wrong, I am not
opposed to fashion, variety and
innovation,” he said. |