Dubai Telegraph - Have Iran's authorities given up on the mandatory hijab?

EUR -
AED 4.181512
AFN 71.731605
ALL 94.199795
AMD 418.288261
ANG 2.038555
AOA 1044.097437
ARS 1684.35625
AUD 1.652304
AWG 2.050906
AZN 1.934371
BAM 1.954343
BBD 2.295289
BDT 140.175531
BGN 1.925239
BHD 0.42968
BIF 3384.677493
BMD 1.138601
BND 1.474601
BOB 7.875131
BRL 5.894546
BSD 1.139651
BTN 106.96728
BWP 15.487458
BYN 3.305237
BYR 22316.588061
BZD 2.291992
CAD 1.615938
CDF 2581.782598
CHF 0.922552
CLF 0.026724
CLP 1050.357198
CNY 7.740383
CNH 7.744004
COP 3914.882346
CRC 517.414385
CUC 1.138601
CUP 30.172938
CVE 110.182884
CZK 24.249942
DJF 202.938755
DKK 7.473091
DOP 66.960096
DZD 151.91778
EGP 56.442028
ERN 17.079021
ETB 183.73157
FJD 2.580183
FKP 0.862694
GBP 0.86225
GEL 3.011643
GGP 0.862694
GHS 12.849424
GIP 0.862694
GMD 83.117718
GNF 9985.558038
GTQ 8.69452
GYD 238.502251
HKD 8.928628
HNL 30.492275
HRK 7.535042
HTG 148.948992
HUF 353.869929
IDR 20336.104731
ILS 3.418138
IMP 0.862694
INR 107.438994
IQD 1492.887392
IRR 1565861.619117
ISK 144.022025
JEP 0.862694
JMD 179.486234
JOD 0.807262
JPY 184.154556
KES 147.470095
KGS 99.570416
KHR 4574.590683
KMF 494.153264
KPW 1024.741687
KRW 1748.083709
KWD 0.352522
KYD 0.949692
KZT 552.947903
LAK 25014.357488
LBP 102053.442377
LKR 383.074505
LRD 207.585292
LSL 18.733039
LTL 3.361994
LVL 0.688728
LYD 7.315548
MAD 10.686336
MDL 20.205941
MGA 4820.407483
MKD 61.589099
MMK 2390.221382
MNT 4075.776259
MOP 9.205839
MRU 45.482103
MUR 53.798751
MVR 17.591442
MWK 1976.127247
MXN 19.965945
MYR 4.654591
MZN 72.754881
NAD 18.733039
NGN 1566.863946
NIO 41.938744
NOK 11.317402
NPR 171.147449
NZD 2.016832
OMR 0.437796
PAB 1.139651
PEN 3.886104
PGK 5.001273
PHP 69.809939
PKR 317.157831
PLN 4.287694
PYG 6955.816022
QAR 4.154104
RON 5.241092
RSD 117.292585
RUB 89.923111
RWF 1668.956173
SAR 4.27971
SBD 9.167965
SCR 16.006271
SDG 683.16092
SEK 11.080419
SGD 1.473288
SHP 0.850081
SLE 28.238005
SLL 23875.906894
SOS 651.314593
SRD 42.678216
STD 23566.750809
STN 24.481754
SVC 9.971568
SYP 125.852005
SZL 18.722047
THB 38.004263
TJS 10.547239
TMT 3.985105
TND 3.377783
TOP 2.741479
TRY 53.077609
TTD 7.745228
TWD 36.275607
TZS 2997.166294
UAH 51.153577
UGX 4182.882613
USD 1.138601
UYU 45.745907
UZS 13688.798115
VES 706.790237
VND 29945.217653
VUV 135.732026
WST 3.166316
XAF 655.468497
XAG 0.019422
XAU 0.00028
XCD 3.077127
XCG 2.053869
XDR 0.815192
XOF 655.468497
XPF 119.331742
YER 271.698778
ZAR 18.746218
ZMK 10248.764827
ZMW 20.528701
ZWL 366.629196
  • CMSD

    -0.1600

    21.77

    -0.73%

  • BCC

    1.2600

    81.02

    +1.56%

  • AZN

    2.7300

    188.41

    +1.45%

  • BCE

    -0.2800

    22.92

    -1.22%

  • RIO

    -1.3700

    93.74

    -1.46%

  • CMSC

    -0.1160

    21.93

    -0.53%

  • NGG

    -0.4100

    83.01

    -0.49%

  • GSK

    0.6100

    52.5

    +1.16%

  • JRI

    0.2100

    12.79

    +1.64%

  • BTI

    0.2800

    62.76

    +0.45%

  • VOD

    0.0300

    13.89

    +0.22%

  • RBGPF

    3.7000

    65

    +5.69%

  • RELX

    0.4200

    31.34

    +1.34%

  • BP

    -0.5900

    37.13

    -1.59%

  • RYCEF

    0.3900

    18.39

    +2.12%

Have Iran's authorities given up on the mandatory hijab?
Have Iran's authorities given up on the mandatory hijab? / Photo: Kirill KUDRYAVTSEV - AFP

Have Iran's authorities given up on the mandatory hijab?

Women swaying to dance music at a DJ set, strolling without headscarves through cutting-edge art exhibitions and in coffee shops showing off trendy styles that could have come from the streets of Europe.

Text size:

Until recently, such scenes would have been unthinkable in the Islamic Republic of Iran, whose strict dress code for women has required they wear the hijab in public since shortly after the 1979 revolution that ousted the pro-Western shah.

But while casually flouting the rule has become increasingly common, Iran's leadership insists the hijab is a legal obligation and is implementing a crackdown that has seen dissident figures who oppose the mandatory headscarf detained.

The tension has come at a critical moment for the clerical establishment, still recovering from the recent 12-day war with Israel and with supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei now 86.

The 2022-2023 nationwide protests, sparked by the custody death of Mahsa Amini who was arrested over alleged improper hijab, are still a recent memory.

Analysts and activists say authorities in recent months have indeed slackened off on imposing the mandatory hijab in daily life, but are far from abandoning an ideological pillar of the Islamic republic, warning a new wave of repression to re-impose it could come at any time.

Roya Boroumand, cofounder and executive director of the US-based Abdorrahman Boroumand Center for Human Rights in Iran, said it was "heartwarming" to see images of women without the headscarf, calling it the result of social pressure from below rather than "a reform granted from above".

"What we see today is unquestionably the result of years of persistent civil disobedience by Iranian women and girls who have fought to carve out and defend a small space of freedom in public life," she told AFP.

Women sporting braids, curls and even bleach-blond locks have now become common sights in public, while more traditional women wear the hijab or chador.

The trend, which has grown more visible in recent months in Tehran and other major cities, now extends to all generations to varying degrees.

Some women are also sporting tighter clothing and outfits that expose their shoulders, legs and midriffs, much to the dismay of conservatives who decry such "nudity" in public.

- Hard to 'put the genie back' -

Boroumand said enforcement of the mandatory hijab varied across the country and that authorities were still closing down businesses deemed to have failed to enforce the rule.

Authorities earlier this month arrested two people who organised a marathon event on Iran's Gulf island of Kish, viral images of which showed dozens of women running bareheaded through the streets. They also shut down a cafe that served as the start and finish point.

Arash Azizi, a postdoctoral associate and lecturer at Yale University, told AFP that "the regime has given up on harshly enforcing mandatory hijab but it has not at all given up on it as a principle yet".

"It would be a grand ideological concession that it is not prepared to make. We still see places closed down and even people fined and arrested due to lax hijab. But the regime knows that it will be very difficult to put the genie back in the bottle."

Other recent incidents have also gone viral on social media: the grand opening of a mall in Tehran, for instance, saw young people dancing and swinging their arms to a DJ's beats.

And a match this month in Iran's second football division was unusual not just for the presence of women -- albeit in a segregated area of the stadium -- but for the fact that many were bareheaded, brandishing scarves of the home team.

Even the office of Khamenei, in power since 1989, came under fire last month from some ultraconservatives after it published in its newspaper a photo of Iranian woman Niloufar Ghalehvand, a pilates instructor killed during the Israeli attacks, wearing a baseball cap rather than hijab.

A design week exhibition at Tehran University saw bareheaded women mingling freely amid boldly experimental art exhibits.

But it closed down early after objections from clerics in a sign of the authorities' readiness to hit back.

- 'Very real risk' -

Hardline judiciary chief Gholamhossein Mohseni Ejei recently warned of a new crackdown, saying that intelligence agencies had been instructed to identify and report "organised currents promoting immorality and non-veiling", adding authorities would take action against those involved.

Khamenei on December 3 defended the hijab in an address, saying Iranian women who respect Islamic dress "can progress more than others in all areas and play an active role both in society and in her home".

Nobel Peace Prize winner Narges Mohammadi, who had steadfastly refused to wear the hijab in public since her release from prison on medical grounds in December 2024, was arrested on December 12 along with dozens of other activists at a memorial ceremony for a lawyer who was found dead earlier this month.

"There is a very real risk of a renewed and harsher crackdown," said Boroumand.

Campaigners warn that while the images of coffee shops and concerts can give the impression of freedom, repression has been cranked up in recent months in the wake of the war against Israel.

The arrest of Mohammadi was just the latest of a prominent dissident figure. There have also been more than 1,400 executions so far this year -- hundreds more than in 2024 -- and groups including the Bahai, Iran's biggest non-Muslim religious minority, are experiencing increased persecution.

"We are seeing an escalation of repression elsewhere, not a trade-off," said Bouroumand.

The mandatory hijab has been key to Iran's Islamic system and a response to what the authorities have traditionally termed "Gharbzadegi", or the "West-toxification" of Iran under the shah.

But the issue is a subject of division within the political establishment inside Iran, with less-hardline figures such as President Masoud Pezeshkian maintaining that women cannot be forced to wear the hijab.

"Khamenei insists on it but the future leadership of the regime, after he passes, will likely have to formalise what's already de-facto and give up on mandatory hijab," Azizi said.

F.Chaudhary--DT