Iran police to confiscate cars of 'poorly veiled' women

Head of Tehran's traffic police says women will need to obtain a court order before getting their seized cars back


Afp September 03, 2015
PHOTO: REUTERS

TEHRAN: Women drivers in Iran's capital could have their cars impounded by police if they are caught driving with a poorly fixed veil or without their heads covered, a police chief said Wednesday.

"If a (female) driver in a car is poorly veiled or has taken her veil off, the vehicle will be seized in accordance with the law," the head of Tehran's traffic police, General Teymour Hosseini, was quoted as saying by the official ISNA news agency.

He added that any woman who had her car seized would need to obtain a court order before getting it back.

Read: Chad warning on veil ban after deadly Boko Haram bombing

Since the Islamic Revolution in 1979, wearing a veil in public has been mandatory for all women in Iran.

But recent decades have seen a loosening of the rules governing female dress and many women in Tehran dress in a way that is far removed from the strict clothing regulations in other observant Muslim countries such as Saudi Arabia.

"Unfortunately, some streets of the capital have come to resemble fashion salons," Iran's judiciary chief Ayatollah Sadegh Larijani said this week, questioning the "tolerance" that has led to "such a situation".

Read: British Muslim woman hopes to end abuse faced by veil wearers

Iran's moderate President Hassan Rouhani has since his June 2013 election overseen some political and social reform but much of the country's political establishment remains deeply conservative.

COMMENTS (5)

Peter | 9 years ago | Reply No one wears a veil in Iran. The photo you have chosen is not from Iran. No woman is dressed like that in Iran. Women only wear a very loose version of Scarf or those who work in government related sections wear a scarf which does not show any hair. BUT veils refer to covering faces and you will not encounter any one in Iran who covers their face.
Asif Khan | 9 years ago | Reply Iran may be a “Bad or an Evil Country" to the west, but it impresses me. Its infrastructure, adherence to law and the morality and civilized norms that came as a result of the 1979 Islamic revolution. A country can only progress if its people are decent and mature enough to follow the law. In Iran this is the norm from a President, to an ordinary street dweller. Hope Pak-Iran friendship will blossom and as a Pakistani , I must never forget that it was Iran in 1947 that first recognized Pakistan as an Independent and Sovereign Islamic Republic,
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